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THEmiddot NOVEMBERmiddot 1938
ALUMNImiddot MAGAZINE
~~~~
~ ~ ~ ~
I A HOOSIER ALMANAC I ~ ~
I~~ penings of the next thirty days to- ~~~~ ~ gether with a wistful look or two ~~ ~ back at the days that were ~ ~ I-FederatIon of Women s Clubs Illstitute today and toshy~ morrow at the UnIOn Building Bloomington ~ Terre Haute alumnI ()men meet an d 6 p m D~ eat emlllg ~ Hotel ~ ~ 2--0n this day 11 years ago the Coleman Hospital for ~ Women and the Ball Nurses home were completed at the ~ ~ Medical Center in Indianapolis ~ ~ ~ 3-Hear Dr E M Linton speak today (and every Tlmrsshy~ ~ day) on Contemporary World Problems at Ft Wayne~ ~ Central High School 8 p m so cents ~
~ 5-Indiana vs Boston College in the Hub City And the ~ I~ Marching Hundred will be along~
6-Spin the dial to [400 to hear the University over WIRE ~ ~ 9 30-9 45 a m Three faculty men dISCUSS Society and the ~ UnderworldI ~ 7-Every Monday noon Indianapolis alumni (men) meet ~ at the Columbia Club ~I Annual Indiana High School Principals Conference in ~ the Union Building on the campus Heads of North Central ~ AssociatIOn-accredited high schools in the state WIll lunch
~ ~ 8--Indiana Urion Open Forum 7 p m on the campus Dr ~ ~ Allen C G Mitchell speaks ~ ~ Raymond Beights 39 and his string ensemble play this ~ day as other Tuesdays over WIRE at 4 p m
~ Serles ~ 9-Emanuel Feuermann cellist opens Music m ~ ~ Mens Gymnasium at 8 15 $1 and up
I ~ of ~ Thomas W Rogers speaks on The Economic Risks ~ the Employee at the C31umet Extension Center East Chishy
cago
~~~ ~ 100Big dOllls on campus Armistice Day program starts ~ ~ with R O T C review at 1 p m then program in Alumni
~ Hall an hour later Also during the day (and Saturday)~ ~ Hoosier State Press Association journalism conference with ~ forums on country correspondents and local features EverI been one ~ First dance held in Mens Gym 1917 ~ ~ 12-Home Football Game Fightin Hoosiers vs Hawkshy~ ~ ~ ~
~ ~I INOVEMBER THIRTY DAYS ~ ~
II I~ ~ ~ EVENTS in the far-flung In- I eyes from Iowa 2 p m At night Blanket
~ diana University world will 1938middot NOVEMBERmiddot1938 Hop in the Gym and you can take your ~ ~ ISu iMo liu UTe Th Fr Sa choice of Fletcher Henderson or Rita Rio ~ ~ take conscientious alumni over a1 ~
~ good bit of the landscape during DDfTl 2 3 4 5 13-Listen to the Hoosier Radio Work- I ~~~ LJ shop round table talk about Distribution ~~~~ ~ the Thanksgiving month Below ~
of Population 9 30 in the morning ~ are presented for your edification 6 1 8 9 10 1112 ~ ~ ~ ~ and cuff-jotted reminders some of 13 14 15 14--South Bend papers please copy ~ ~ Every Monday noon S B alumni meet ~ ~ the hIghlights of University hap- 20 2122 23 24 526 at Y M C A ~
D I~~~~15-Amencan Association of Univer- ~
sity Women dmner at Union Building ~ 6 p m ~
~ University Theater presents tonIght and tomorrow night ~ Stage Door but come around to the main entrance of the ~ Union at eight Half dollar per head ~ ~
~ 16-0n this date in 1934 Dr ] E P Holland University ~
physician installed a chlorine treatment room where SIX ~ students at a time could sit study sniff cure their colds ~
~ Bring the campus into your living room by tuning in today ~
~ and every Wednesday on the program coming directly from ~ ~
the Commons in the Union Building Fifteen minutes of stu- ~ ~
dent interviews and music fifteen minutes of collegiate news- ~ ~
cast 4-4 30 p m WIRE ~
~ 18--State Drama Conference sponsored by Theta Alpha ~
Ph U B Id BI PI hi I~I III ilion UI mg oommgton ays s opta k n ~
everything Goes on tomorrow too
~ 19-0h boy the PURDUE GAME At Lafayette ~
~ 20-Put down the funny papers and hear the University I
broadcast on Art and Society 9 30 a m and at the same ~ ~ time a week from today Music and Society ~I
21-First Old Oaken Bucket contest and first game ever ~ to be played in Memorial Stadium 1925 ~
~ 22-At 12 IS p m today as every Tuesday ChIcago alumni ~ meet at Harding Restaurant III Fair Store corner Dear- ~ ~ born and Adams ~
~ Also Indiana Union Open Forum at night ~
24--University faculty members Sanders and Collins ~ ~ broadcast a book review from the Fireside Book Shop 4-4 15 ~
I ~
p m Regular Thursday feature ~ ~
Also THANKSGIVING DAY (John and Mary will be ~ home from college)
28-Another Interior DecoratIOn talk at Indianapolis Ex- ~~~ ~
tension Center Period Furniture this time ~ ~
29-Just 20 years ago today President William Lowe ~~ Bryan received radio orders to demobilize the S A T C ~ Remember the war days
30-Today the DO NOT Alumni Magazine office door ready for mail
~I DISTURB sign hangs on ~
as staff gets December issue ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
L E T
SIRs-Congratulations Your fi rst issue was enjoyed very much Revive us Again
tf ILLIAM C SSADY excgt9 Chicago Ill
SIRs-I a m glad to have received the October issue It was a pleasant surprise to read among those giving you adv ice on how to run the magazine a Sullivan lawyer Mr John S Taylor [10 LLBII] once a pupil of mine in a country school in the old home state I think if he will judicia lly appraise the na me [of the magaz in e] now in use he will find it quite suited to the need and if he will inspect the issue now out he will find you had ant icipated such ideas and were on your way
JOHN A CURRY exoI Editor The Dispatch
Douglas Ariz
SIRs-Ive just finished reading the first edi tion of the new magazine and I want to tell you youve got something there I liked especially the twoshypage spread of State Policeman Crabshytree from Gnaw Bone I hope you can dig something like that out for every issue
Only one squeak You should use seven-point type for Alumni Notes I ne ler thought I would be anx iously sca nning an a lumni column to fin d out about my classmates and I had the cheated feeling that somebody was spreading a few names out a wfully fa r when I did do that scanning
I nd ianapolis E ARL H OH 38
The MAGAZINE will try to dig somethi ng out like Officer Crabtree of Gnaw Bone but not for every issue Reason cost Conshytemplated for a fut ure issue is a pictor ial survey o f the Universitys correspondence studen ts
The editoria l board considered well se tshyting the I Knew Him When section in seven-point type two months before Mr Hoffs suggestion was made Idea was abanshydoned because ([) not all alumni have such sharp eyes as Mr Hoff (w ho as editor of the Indiana Daily StudeJlt never wore glasses) and (2) experiments on randomshyse lected alumni during the summer proved they preferred the present ten-point type
Let Subscriber Hoff see the bundles of as yet untyped class new s notes before he makes the charge that somebody was spread ing a few names out awfully far - ED
SIRS-A great many periodicals of all classes come to my desk and thi s [TrIE INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE] is
the most at tractive that I have seen of uni versi ty or collegiate publica-
T E R s tions of thi s kind I wonder if a ll of our alumni realize the work involved in getting out an issue of thi s character
How ARD L W VNEGAR LLBo7 President Commercial
Credi t Company New York
Those on th e ed itoria l boa rd do- Eo
Sms-I hasten to tell you that I like the new magazine It has vim and vigor and gives good g limpses of campus life I particularly like the letters to the ed itors and the edi tori al come-backs
MARY OR IS A ]1 18 Ind ianapolis
You are now reading an other-Eo
S IRs-The new mag looks great a nd we certainly do want our name li sted ior a years subscript ion as well as the membership in the 1 U A lumni Assoshyciation H owever the Missus [E ugenia Huston ex3S ] is quite conshycerned She is just as proud of her a lumni connections as I am but we could hardly use two subscriptions Do you have some sort of a joint membershyship for husband a nd wife Af ter aU two kids from Indiana U get married once in a whi le and methinks someshything should be done
KENNETH A GROW eX 3S Yuma Ariz
Someth ing is don e The ALUMNI MAGAshyZINE well aware of the nuptial tend encies of alum ni offers associate memberships at $[ per yea r for wives (in add iti on to the $3 annually for husba nd s) This provides a j oint subscr iption to the MAGAZINE and two memberships in the A lumni Associa tion - ED
SIRs-Your subscr ipti on reshyquest be fore me Enclosed fi nd my pershysonal check
I am not an Indiana University gradshyuate-hardly an a lumnus as dear good Dr Jordan once reminded me I yearly sent the doctor a birthday greeting Once egotistically I added to the signature Your one-time stushyde nt This was courteously acknowledged but the good doctor inked in following hi s signature Should we say student or matricushylate
Yet those good teachers of Bloomshyington days we re patient with me and tr ied- Coulter Bryan Eigenma lln Woodward Clarke Ross Commons and the fine Frenchman who ra ved as
(Continued on page 27)
1S rIMEI cHfCK-ItP 10 yoliT
0 1IIGtfiil
1===
PROPER LIGHTING MEANS MORE COMFORT AND EYE HEALTH
Plenty of the right kind of ligh t involves a lot more than personal taste Reading workshying sewing or anything that requires accurate sight requires a definite amount of li ght not on ly for comfort but to insure you r eyes against unnecessary strain And far too often the light available is much less than that needed
Take a good look at your lighting Ask at our showroom how you can have Better Light - Better Sight
Siqhlis PRICELESS
liqhf is CHEAP
PUBLIC SERVICE
COMPANY OF INDIANA
E M oSpecial Train
to The Cover all history The influence of a scholar
Lafayette account
Football Game
Indiana vs Purdue
Saturday
November 19 1938
$300 Round Trip
SCHEDULE (Going)
Lv Bloomington 800 a m
Ar Lafayette 1045 a m
(Returning)
Lv Lafayette 730 p m Ar Bloomington 1015 p m
Tickets good returning
on all trains up to No3
Sunday night Nov 20
Travel With the Team
in
Safety and Comfort
For further information call
R F Schmalz C P T A
Phone 3434
MONON 1oute
(Photograph copyright by Harris alld Ewing)
The appointment of Howard R Tolshyley TO as chief of the newly constishytuted Bureau of Agricultural Economshyics in the United States Department of Agriculture was recently announced by Secretary Henry A Wallace This Bureau the secretary announced will include all general programming and planning for adjustment conservation and marketing programs of the deshypartment It will include the Program Planning Division and the general planning for the marketing programs heretofore in the AAA with which Mr Tolley has been associated for the last five years and since June 1936 as adshymin istrator
After graduation Mr Tolley taught for a short time in the high school in Michigan City Ind In 1912 he went to Vashington as mathematician in the Coast and Geodetic Survey and in 1916 became a scientific assistant in farm management in the United States Deshypartment of Agriculture In 1930 he left Washington to become Director of the Giannini Foundation of Agriculshytural Economics He has written proshyfusely A Jist of his published works fills more than six closely typewritten pages
Mr Tolley was born in Howard County in 1889 graduated from Conshyverse High School in 1905 and attended Marion College for one year While in the University he was a member of the University Band and a member of the Euclidean Circle His major subject was mathematics He was married in 1912 to Zora F Hazlett of Rockville Ind They have three sons Grant 22 Elmer r6 and George 12
Great Men Through the courtesy of James Seyshy
bold Adams 23 of N ew York the alumni office was presented with a copy of a new University of Chicago publishycation entitled Great Men It is a partial listing of those persons who have added to the enlightenment of mankind through endowed professorshyships at the University of Chicago
Great Men the author suggests beget great men If it were possible to trace the genealogy of a scholarly strain of a tradition of an idea Wilshyliam Rainey Harper the flashing comet in the western sky of the unishyverse of learning would be seen to have been one of the most fertile men in
is geometric The minds of hundreds of students who will be the scholars of the next generation are molded by a single master Consider just one line of descent Michelson came to Chicago because Harper was there The group of men who made the Universitys physics department the first in the nashytion came to Chicago because Michelshyson was there and among them was Compton In recent years scores of the countrys most promising young physishycists have come to Chicago because Compton was there A similar successhysion of leaders has come down in every department that Harper made great
Harper had used every form of pershysuasion-short of violence-to lure the scholars of the East into Vhat they reshygarded as the intellectual wilderness His success in the face of his own genushyine concern for the fate of the project marked him as a rare master of the arts of choosing men and winning them
The book then lists the names of the twenty-nine scholars who have helel especia lly endowed chairs There are 1)0W twenty-one endowed chairs at the University of Chicago providing for $TOOOO salaries for men either in special chairs or for men in any field These professorships permit the holder to devote a large part of his time to reshysearch and the guidance 0 f graduate workers
There is no doubt that there is such a thing as an overpaid professor but there is also no doubt that it takes money to secure great men-and it takes great men to make a university great
District Councilors On December 10 there will be a
meeting here on the campus of district councilors representing the twenty-five alumni districts in Indiana This meetshying will be for the purpose of continushying with plans for strengthening our alumni program in this state At the initial meeting last spring the councilshyors were given a complete picture of the University-its plans and problemsshyand were asked for their advice and suggestions It is the hope of the alumni office and of those in charge of the Unishyversitys administration that through this method our alumni may be given the opportunity of greater service to their University In like manner it is hoped that through their aid the Unishyversity can become of greater service to alumni students and to the state
THE NOVEMBER 1938
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Continuing the Indiana University Alumni ~uarterly and The Indiana Alumnus
Volume I Number 2
STAFF
GEORGE F HEIGHWAY Co-nienlsEdito-r Cover
ROGER A HURST H OWARD R TOLLEY TO CHIEF BUREAU OF AGRICUL-kallaging poundditol
TURALECONOMICS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENTIVY L CHAMNESS
Associate Editor OF AGR ICULTURE
EDITORIAL BOARD News E Ross Bartley Ward G Biddle ALUMNI RETURN FOR HOMECOMING
Walter S Greenough Thomas Buck and George Gardner 5 lIlrs Alta Brunt Sembower Grads Throng Campus f or Kansas State Game
John E Stempel
SONS AND DAUGHTERS 8 INDIANA UNIVERSITY IvlallY Children of A lutlli Are Ellro lled ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
THE UNIVERSITY IN OCTOBER 9President NTATTHEW VINTERS I S AlYl 17 Indiana polis A Campus News Digest
Vice-Pres JOHN S TAYLOR 10 LLB 11 Sullivan MEETING CALLED T O ORDER q
Secretor) GEORGE F HEI C HWAY LLB22 News of Alumni ClubsBloomington
Treasurer WARD C BIDDLE 16 Bloominglon I KNEW HIM WHEN 20
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Alumni News Notes by Classes 1936middot39
FRNK E ALLEN 16 AM 24 South Bend lIRs KATHARINE CROAN GREENOU GH 11 Features
Indianapolis DONALD A ROGERS LLB27 Bloomington REFLECTION S Fowler V Harper 4
1937middot4() THE NEWS IS rvlY BUSINESS Milton Ronsheim 7 LE)IUpoundL A PITTENGER 07 AMOS Muncie
lIRs ALTA BRUNT SEMBOWER 01 Bloomington THAT HIS WORK MAY LIVE O N I I VAJTER E TREANOR 12 LLB22 JD23
Chicago I TEACH INDIAN CHILDREN Iargaret Winslow T2
1938middot41
DEAN L BARNHART 11 Goshen BENTON J BLOOM ()7 Columbia City Sports
vIRS OLIVE BELDON LEWIS 14 Indianapolis FIGHT~N HOOSIERS George L Gardner 16NEWELL H LONG 28 School of Music alumni
DOUGLAS H -VHITE School of Dentistry a lum ni NEWS NOTES OF VARSITY SPORTS William Buchanan 18
Alumni Secretary IS THE ROD MIGHTIER THAN THE GUN H)GEORGE F HEIGHVr A Y LLBzz
Published monthly except August and Sepmiddot tember by the I ndiana University Alumni Assomiddot Departmentsciation Office of publication 338 E Market S t Tndianapolis I ndia na Editorial office LETTERS l lllion Buildiug Indiana University Bloomingshyton I~ldiana MEMO 2
Annual subscription rate $300 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni Asshy FOR ALUMNAE ONLY Helen Weatherwax 13sociation) Single copies 25 cents
Member of American Alumni CounciL ALUMNI AUTHORS Book Reviews 15Entered to the second class of mail matter
at the post office at Indianapolis Ind under the Act of March 3 1879 IN CLOSING Editorials 32
Iltetleciio-ngt by Fowler V Harper Professor of Law and Chairman
of the University Self-Survey Committee
I N REFLECTING on the purposes and objectives of Indiana University it often occurs to me that
the American conception of a university as an instishytution has undergone a change which while almost imperceptable over a few years is of the greatest significance when observed over a long period Hisshytorically the university was in a very real sense an institution of distinctly higher learning It was a place where the student acquired an erudition in the arts law medicine or theology which represented a sophistication of a definitely high order It was a place where the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of the past was subjected to the distillation of medishytative and critical analysis _Later the university became a laboratory for experimental science-a place where the frontiers of 4nowledge were pushed forward in the search for new truth These funcshytions naturally characterized the university as the habitat of thinkers scholars and men of science In short the principal activity of the institution was intellectual both on the part of the students and the teachers The university was a place where the minds of the students were trained and the minds of the professors were exercised and strengthened Actually there was little difference save in degree between the activities of student and the teacher The one received guidance from the other Each reshyceived stimulus from the -other Thus each conshytributed to the education of the other
The thought is inescapable that the modern unishyversity represents an entirely different type of inshystitution both in aims and in procedure We still
pay lip-service to the traditional patshytern We cling to the same names and labels Howshyever the univershysity today is less concerned with the training of the minds of its stushydents than ~ith the organization of their social and moral prejudices and the cultivashytion of skills and techniques which presumably will be useful to them in their economic
Fowler V Harper lives To put it
in another way we are concerned more with trainshying stuqents for action than training them for thought In this sense the steady trend for several generations has been anti-intellectual in character This program is expressed in many ways and imshyplifd in many others The university must prepare its students to fit into some niche in life It must develop the whole life of the student It must extend its personnel activities to reach every phase of his life It must prepare him to mix to earn a living to become a good citizen
It is not to be denied that these are in a sense quite legitimate and proper objectives The emshyphasis -placed thereon however might be interpreted as an attenuated or eliptical analysis of the univershysitys function It might be assumed that such qualishyties or attainments are desirable and in some inshystances indispensable attributes of life itself to which university training will invariably contribute something of value On the other hand emphasis upon such matters as immediate objectives of the university program is calculated to obscure the unique contribution which such training can make to the good life namely subjection of the mind to the rigorous discipline of scholarship and the arduous task of acquiring knowledge It was one of the inarticulate assumptions of the classical univershysity that such discipline and knowledge was in itself a great good and the means to even greater good
The university today may quite justly be charged with seeking to obtain the ultimate ends of educashytion without paying the price or exacting it from its students It is attempting to prepare young people for life without giving them the intellectual equipshyment that for so many centuries has been regarded as a requisite to the most satisfactory mode of life In this gradual shift of emphasis there is I think much that is unwise It constitutes a direct if someshywhat subtle challenge to values which men from the time of the Greeks have held high The university no longer represents Jeffersons ideal of an institushytion for the development of an intellectual aristocshyracy to which all have an opportunity of membershyship-opportunity it should be noted that is as nearly equal as political democracy can make it While I do not abjure completely the so-called practical ideal in education on the college level I cannot help believing that in the long run that training is most practical which contributes most to the intellectual growth of the student and that it is the peculiar province of the university to afford young people such training if necessary at the exshypense of other attainments Lshy I
) J
The November 1938 4
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Volume I November 1938 Number 2
Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming
by THOMAS BUCK 39
and
GEORGE G_RDNER 3-+
APILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back to the campus the traditional Powwow and its
pre-game pep the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic feud a jam-packed Union lobby luncheons and banshyquets eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts Gi rl Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the camshypus fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decorashytions long files of orange busses bringing high school students the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State game under a perfect football sky and the rhythm and rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday nightshysuch was H omecoming in the year of our school 1938
Even before returning graduates and former stushydents arrived to regi ster in the Union Building Homeshycoming festivities broke loose with the School of Law duck raffle on Friday afternoon Climaxing weeks of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of the Daily Student the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Third Street Medic citadel resulted in a water fight (in paper bags) between the two future professhysional groups
That night the hatchet was temporarily interred while the University and its visiting tlumni attended the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Mens Gym
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18000
Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly and inside there vas fooel talk and Marching Hundred band music Presi ding as A llen G Messick 12
Speakers included Z G Clevenger University director of athletics I -Mens Association President Leroy Sandshyers exos who pledged the support of the Alumni Association to the varsity President Emeritus tVilshyliam Lowe Bryan dubbed for the occasion Heap iVise Man Bill-Lo Bryan President Herman B Wells and Coach A N (Bo) McMillin
Representing the football team of 1893 H a rry McshyDowell a VVinamac attorney reminisced of the grid sport in the old days Benton] Bloom squad of 03
lt and Clair H Scott on the eleven in 13 told of footshyball from their way back when angles Fo ll owing the meal in the gym two freshman teams battled to an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof of the Fieldhouse
Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windyshyand more alumni stopped at the Union desk to identi fy themselves Oldest grad to register was Mark P Helm 94 Indianapolis Those from the greatest distance were Hubert E Rich 25 of ifichita Kan and Fred G White 0S Detroit lv[ich although other
5
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
~~~~
~ ~ ~ ~
I A HOOSIER ALMANAC I ~ ~
I~~ penings of the next thirty days to- ~~~~ ~ gether with a wistful look or two ~~ ~ back at the days that were ~ ~ I-FederatIon of Women s Clubs Illstitute today and toshy~ morrow at the UnIOn Building Bloomington ~ Terre Haute alumnI ()men meet an d 6 p m D~ eat emlllg ~ Hotel ~ ~ 2--0n this day 11 years ago the Coleman Hospital for ~ Women and the Ball Nurses home were completed at the ~ ~ Medical Center in Indianapolis ~ ~ ~ 3-Hear Dr E M Linton speak today (and every Tlmrsshy~ ~ day) on Contemporary World Problems at Ft Wayne~ ~ Central High School 8 p m so cents ~
~ 5-Indiana vs Boston College in the Hub City And the ~ I~ Marching Hundred will be along~
6-Spin the dial to [400 to hear the University over WIRE ~ ~ 9 30-9 45 a m Three faculty men dISCUSS Society and the ~ UnderworldI ~ 7-Every Monday noon Indianapolis alumni (men) meet ~ at the Columbia Club ~I Annual Indiana High School Principals Conference in ~ the Union Building on the campus Heads of North Central ~ AssociatIOn-accredited high schools in the state WIll lunch
~ ~ 8--Indiana Urion Open Forum 7 p m on the campus Dr ~ ~ Allen C G Mitchell speaks ~ ~ Raymond Beights 39 and his string ensemble play this ~ day as other Tuesdays over WIRE at 4 p m
~ Serles ~ 9-Emanuel Feuermann cellist opens Music m ~ ~ Mens Gymnasium at 8 15 $1 and up
I ~ of ~ Thomas W Rogers speaks on The Economic Risks ~ the Employee at the C31umet Extension Center East Chishy
cago
~~~ ~ 100Big dOllls on campus Armistice Day program starts ~ ~ with R O T C review at 1 p m then program in Alumni
~ Hall an hour later Also during the day (and Saturday)~ ~ Hoosier State Press Association journalism conference with ~ forums on country correspondents and local features EverI been one ~ First dance held in Mens Gym 1917 ~ ~ 12-Home Football Game Fightin Hoosiers vs Hawkshy~ ~ ~ ~
~ ~I INOVEMBER THIRTY DAYS ~ ~
II I~ ~ ~ EVENTS in the far-flung In- I eyes from Iowa 2 p m At night Blanket
~ diana University world will 1938middot NOVEMBERmiddot1938 Hop in the Gym and you can take your ~ ~ ISu iMo liu UTe Th Fr Sa choice of Fletcher Henderson or Rita Rio ~ ~ take conscientious alumni over a1 ~
~ good bit of the landscape during DDfTl 2 3 4 5 13-Listen to the Hoosier Radio Work- I ~~~ LJ shop round table talk about Distribution ~~~~ ~ the Thanksgiving month Below ~
of Population 9 30 in the morning ~ are presented for your edification 6 1 8 9 10 1112 ~ ~ ~ ~ and cuff-jotted reminders some of 13 14 15 14--South Bend papers please copy ~ ~ Every Monday noon S B alumni meet ~ ~ the hIghlights of University hap- 20 2122 23 24 526 at Y M C A ~
D I~~~~15-Amencan Association of Univer- ~
sity Women dmner at Union Building ~ 6 p m ~
~ University Theater presents tonIght and tomorrow night ~ Stage Door but come around to the main entrance of the ~ Union at eight Half dollar per head ~ ~
~ 16-0n this date in 1934 Dr ] E P Holland University ~
physician installed a chlorine treatment room where SIX ~ students at a time could sit study sniff cure their colds ~
~ Bring the campus into your living room by tuning in today ~
~ and every Wednesday on the program coming directly from ~ ~
the Commons in the Union Building Fifteen minutes of stu- ~ ~
dent interviews and music fifteen minutes of collegiate news- ~ ~
cast 4-4 30 p m WIRE ~
~ 18--State Drama Conference sponsored by Theta Alpha ~
Ph U B Id BI PI hi I~I III ilion UI mg oommgton ays s opta k n ~
everything Goes on tomorrow too
~ 19-0h boy the PURDUE GAME At Lafayette ~
~ 20-Put down the funny papers and hear the University I
broadcast on Art and Society 9 30 a m and at the same ~ ~ time a week from today Music and Society ~I
21-First Old Oaken Bucket contest and first game ever ~ to be played in Memorial Stadium 1925 ~
~ 22-At 12 IS p m today as every Tuesday ChIcago alumni ~ meet at Harding Restaurant III Fair Store corner Dear- ~ ~ born and Adams ~
~ Also Indiana Union Open Forum at night ~
24--University faculty members Sanders and Collins ~ ~ broadcast a book review from the Fireside Book Shop 4-4 15 ~
I ~
p m Regular Thursday feature ~ ~
Also THANKSGIVING DAY (John and Mary will be ~ home from college)
28-Another Interior DecoratIOn talk at Indianapolis Ex- ~~~ ~
tension Center Period Furniture this time ~ ~
29-Just 20 years ago today President William Lowe ~~ Bryan received radio orders to demobilize the S A T C ~ Remember the war days
30-Today the DO NOT Alumni Magazine office door ready for mail
~I DISTURB sign hangs on ~
as staff gets December issue ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
L E T
SIRs-Congratulations Your fi rst issue was enjoyed very much Revive us Again
tf ILLIAM C SSADY excgt9 Chicago Ill
SIRs-I a m glad to have received the October issue It was a pleasant surprise to read among those giving you adv ice on how to run the magazine a Sullivan lawyer Mr John S Taylor [10 LLBII] once a pupil of mine in a country school in the old home state I think if he will judicia lly appraise the na me [of the magaz in e] now in use he will find it quite suited to the need and if he will inspect the issue now out he will find you had ant icipated such ideas and were on your way
JOHN A CURRY exoI Editor The Dispatch
Douglas Ariz
SIRs-Ive just finished reading the first edi tion of the new magazine and I want to tell you youve got something there I liked especially the twoshypage spread of State Policeman Crabshytree from Gnaw Bone I hope you can dig something like that out for every issue
Only one squeak You should use seven-point type for Alumni Notes I ne ler thought I would be anx iously sca nning an a lumni column to fin d out about my classmates and I had the cheated feeling that somebody was spreading a few names out a wfully fa r when I did do that scanning
I nd ianapolis E ARL H OH 38
The MAGAZINE will try to dig somethi ng out like Officer Crabtree of Gnaw Bone but not for every issue Reason cost Conshytemplated for a fut ure issue is a pictor ial survey o f the Universitys correspondence studen ts
The editoria l board considered well se tshyting the I Knew Him When section in seven-point type two months before Mr Hoffs suggestion was made Idea was abanshydoned because ([) not all alumni have such sharp eyes as Mr Hoff (w ho as editor of the Indiana Daily StudeJlt never wore glasses) and (2) experiments on randomshyse lected alumni during the summer proved they preferred the present ten-point type
Let Subscriber Hoff see the bundles of as yet untyped class new s notes before he makes the charge that somebody was spread ing a few names out awfully far - ED
SIRS-A great many periodicals of all classes come to my desk and thi s [TrIE INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE] is
the most at tractive that I have seen of uni versi ty or collegiate publica-
T E R s tions of thi s kind I wonder if a ll of our alumni realize the work involved in getting out an issue of thi s character
How ARD L W VNEGAR LLBo7 President Commercial
Credi t Company New York
Those on th e ed itoria l boa rd do- Eo
Sms-I hasten to tell you that I like the new magazine It has vim and vigor and gives good g limpses of campus life I particularly like the letters to the ed itors and the edi tori al come-backs
MARY OR IS A ]1 18 Ind ianapolis
You are now reading an other-Eo
S IRs-The new mag looks great a nd we certainly do want our name li sted ior a years subscript ion as well as the membership in the 1 U A lumni Assoshyciation H owever the Missus [E ugenia Huston ex3S ] is quite conshycerned She is just as proud of her a lumni connections as I am but we could hardly use two subscriptions Do you have some sort of a joint membershyship for husband a nd wife Af ter aU two kids from Indiana U get married once in a whi le and methinks someshything should be done
KENNETH A GROW eX 3S Yuma Ariz
Someth ing is don e The ALUMNI MAGAshyZINE well aware of the nuptial tend encies of alum ni offers associate memberships at $[ per yea r for wives (in add iti on to the $3 annually for husba nd s) This provides a j oint subscr iption to the MAGAZINE and two memberships in the A lumni Associa tion - ED
SIRs-Your subscr ipti on reshyquest be fore me Enclosed fi nd my pershysonal check
I am not an Indiana University gradshyuate-hardly an a lumnus as dear good Dr Jordan once reminded me I yearly sent the doctor a birthday greeting Once egotistically I added to the signature Your one-time stushyde nt This was courteously acknowledged but the good doctor inked in following hi s signature Should we say student or matricushylate
Yet those good teachers of Bloomshyington days we re patient with me and tr ied- Coulter Bryan Eigenma lln Woodward Clarke Ross Commons and the fine Frenchman who ra ved as
(Continued on page 27)
1S rIMEI cHfCK-ItP 10 yoliT
0 1IIGtfiil
1===
PROPER LIGHTING MEANS MORE COMFORT AND EYE HEALTH
Plenty of the right kind of ligh t involves a lot more than personal taste Reading workshying sewing or anything that requires accurate sight requires a definite amount of li ght not on ly for comfort but to insure you r eyes against unnecessary strain And far too often the light available is much less than that needed
Take a good look at your lighting Ask at our showroom how you can have Better Light - Better Sight
Siqhlis PRICELESS
liqhf is CHEAP
PUBLIC SERVICE
COMPANY OF INDIANA
E M oSpecial Train
to The Cover all history The influence of a scholar
Lafayette account
Football Game
Indiana vs Purdue
Saturday
November 19 1938
$300 Round Trip
SCHEDULE (Going)
Lv Bloomington 800 a m
Ar Lafayette 1045 a m
(Returning)
Lv Lafayette 730 p m Ar Bloomington 1015 p m
Tickets good returning
on all trains up to No3
Sunday night Nov 20
Travel With the Team
in
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For further information call
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MONON 1oute
(Photograph copyright by Harris alld Ewing)
The appointment of Howard R Tolshyley TO as chief of the newly constishytuted Bureau of Agricultural Economshyics in the United States Department of Agriculture was recently announced by Secretary Henry A Wallace This Bureau the secretary announced will include all general programming and planning for adjustment conservation and marketing programs of the deshypartment It will include the Program Planning Division and the general planning for the marketing programs heretofore in the AAA with which Mr Tolley has been associated for the last five years and since June 1936 as adshymin istrator
After graduation Mr Tolley taught for a short time in the high school in Michigan City Ind In 1912 he went to Vashington as mathematician in the Coast and Geodetic Survey and in 1916 became a scientific assistant in farm management in the United States Deshypartment of Agriculture In 1930 he left Washington to become Director of the Giannini Foundation of Agriculshytural Economics He has written proshyfusely A Jist of his published works fills more than six closely typewritten pages
Mr Tolley was born in Howard County in 1889 graduated from Conshyverse High School in 1905 and attended Marion College for one year While in the University he was a member of the University Band and a member of the Euclidean Circle His major subject was mathematics He was married in 1912 to Zora F Hazlett of Rockville Ind They have three sons Grant 22 Elmer r6 and George 12
Great Men Through the courtesy of James Seyshy
bold Adams 23 of N ew York the alumni office was presented with a copy of a new University of Chicago publishycation entitled Great Men It is a partial listing of those persons who have added to the enlightenment of mankind through endowed professorshyships at the University of Chicago
Great Men the author suggests beget great men If it were possible to trace the genealogy of a scholarly strain of a tradition of an idea Wilshyliam Rainey Harper the flashing comet in the western sky of the unishyverse of learning would be seen to have been one of the most fertile men in
is geometric The minds of hundreds of students who will be the scholars of the next generation are molded by a single master Consider just one line of descent Michelson came to Chicago because Harper was there The group of men who made the Universitys physics department the first in the nashytion came to Chicago because Michelshyson was there and among them was Compton In recent years scores of the countrys most promising young physishycists have come to Chicago because Compton was there A similar successhysion of leaders has come down in every department that Harper made great
Harper had used every form of pershysuasion-short of violence-to lure the scholars of the East into Vhat they reshygarded as the intellectual wilderness His success in the face of his own genushyine concern for the fate of the project marked him as a rare master of the arts of choosing men and winning them
The book then lists the names of the twenty-nine scholars who have helel especia lly endowed chairs There are 1)0W twenty-one endowed chairs at the University of Chicago providing for $TOOOO salaries for men either in special chairs or for men in any field These professorships permit the holder to devote a large part of his time to reshysearch and the guidance 0 f graduate workers
There is no doubt that there is such a thing as an overpaid professor but there is also no doubt that it takes money to secure great men-and it takes great men to make a university great
District Councilors On December 10 there will be a
meeting here on the campus of district councilors representing the twenty-five alumni districts in Indiana This meetshying will be for the purpose of continushying with plans for strengthening our alumni program in this state At the initial meeting last spring the councilshyors were given a complete picture of the University-its plans and problemsshyand were asked for their advice and suggestions It is the hope of the alumni office and of those in charge of the Unishyversitys administration that through this method our alumni may be given the opportunity of greater service to their University In like manner it is hoped that through their aid the Unishyversity can become of greater service to alumni students and to the state
THE NOVEMBER 1938
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Continuing the Indiana University Alumni ~uarterly and The Indiana Alumnus
Volume I Number 2
STAFF
GEORGE F HEIGHWAY Co-nienlsEdito-r Cover
ROGER A HURST H OWARD R TOLLEY TO CHIEF BUREAU OF AGRICUL-kallaging poundditol
TURALECONOMICS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENTIVY L CHAMNESS
Associate Editor OF AGR ICULTURE
EDITORIAL BOARD News E Ross Bartley Ward G Biddle ALUMNI RETURN FOR HOMECOMING
Walter S Greenough Thomas Buck and George Gardner 5 lIlrs Alta Brunt Sembower Grads Throng Campus f or Kansas State Game
John E Stempel
SONS AND DAUGHTERS 8 INDIANA UNIVERSITY IvlallY Children of A lutlli Are Ellro lled ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
THE UNIVERSITY IN OCTOBER 9President NTATTHEW VINTERS I S AlYl 17 Indiana polis A Campus News Digest
Vice-Pres JOHN S TAYLOR 10 LLB 11 Sullivan MEETING CALLED T O ORDER q
Secretor) GEORGE F HEI C HWAY LLB22 News of Alumni ClubsBloomington
Treasurer WARD C BIDDLE 16 Bloominglon I KNEW HIM WHEN 20
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Alumni News Notes by Classes 1936middot39
FRNK E ALLEN 16 AM 24 South Bend lIRs KATHARINE CROAN GREENOU GH 11 Features
Indianapolis DONALD A ROGERS LLB27 Bloomington REFLECTION S Fowler V Harper 4
1937middot4() THE NEWS IS rvlY BUSINESS Milton Ronsheim 7 LE)IUpoundL A PITTENGER 07 AMOS Muncie
lIRs ALTA BRUNT SEMBOWER 01 Bloomington THAT HIS WORK MAY LIVE O N I I VAJTER E TREANOR 12 LLB22 JD23
Chicago I TEACH INDIAN CHILDREN Iargaret Winslow T2
1938middot41
DEAN L BARNHART 11 Goshen BENTON J BLOOM ()7 Columbia City Sports
vIRS OLIVE BELDON LEWIS 14 Indianapolis FIGHT~N HOOSIERS George L Gardner 16NEWELL H LONG 28 School of Music alumni
DOUGLAS H -VHITE School of Dentistry a lum ni NEWS NOTES OF VARSITY SPORTS William Buchanan 18
Alumni Secretary IS THE ROD MIGHTIER THAN THE GUN H)GEORGE F HEIGHVr A Y LLBzz
Published monthly except August and Sepmiddot tember by the I ndiana University Alumni Assomiddot Departmentsciation Office of publication 338 E Market S t Tndianapolis I ndia na Editorial office LETTERS l lllion Buildiug Indiana University Bloomingshyton I~ldiana MEMO 2
Annual subscription rate $300 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni Asshy FOR ALUMNAE ONLY Helen Weatherwax 13sociation) Single copies 25 cents
Member of American Alumni CounciL ALUMNI AUTHORS Book Reviews 15Entered to the second class of mail matter
at the post office at Indianapolis Ind under the Act of March 3 1879 IN CLOSING Editorials 32
Iltetleciio-ngt by Fowler V Harper Professor of Law and Chairman
of the University Self-Survey Committee
I N REFLECTING on the purposes and objectives of Indiana University it often occurs to me that
the American conception of a university as an instishytution has undergone a change which while almost imperceptable over a few years is of the greatest significance when observed over a long period Hisshytorically the university was in a very real sense an institution of distinctly higher learning It was a place where the student acquired an erudition in the arts law medicine or theology which represented a sophistication of a definitely high order It was a place where the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of the past was subjected to the distillation of medishytative and critical analysis _Later the university became a laboratory for experimental science-a place where the frontiers of 4nowledge were pushed forward in the search for new truth These funcshytions naturally characterized the university as the habitat of thinkers scholars and men of science In short the principal activity of the institution was intellectual both on the part of the students and the teachers The university was a place where the minds of the students were trained and the minds of the professors were exercised and strengthened Actually there was little difference save in degree between the activities of student and the teacher The one received guidance from the other Each reshyceived stimulus from the -other Thus each conshytributed to the education of the other
The thought is inescapable that the modern unishyversity represents an entirely different type of inshystitution both in aims and in procedure We still
pay lip-service to the traditional patshytern We cling to the same names and labels Howshyever the univershysity today is less concerned with the training of the minds of its stushydents than ~ith the organization of their social and moral prejudices and the cultivashytion of skills and techniques which presumably will be useful to them in their economic
Fowler V Harper lives To put it
in another way we are concerned more with trainshying stuqents for action than training them for thought In this sense the steady trend for several generations has been anti-intellectual in character This program is expressed in many ways and imshyplifd in many others The university must prepare its students to fit into some niche in life It must develop the whole life of the student It must extend its personnel activities to reach every phase of his life It must prepare him to mix to earn a living to become a good citizen
It is not to be denied that these are in a sense quite legitimate and proper objectives The emshyphasis -placed thereon however might be interpreted as an attenuated or eliptical analysis of the univershysitys function It might be assumed that such qualishyties or attainments are desirable and in some inshystances indispensable attributes of life itself to which university training will invariably contribute something of value On the other hand emphasis upon such matters as immediate objectives of the university program is calculated to obscure the unique contribution which such training can make to the good life namely subjection of the mind to the rigorous discipline of scholarship and the arduous task of acquiring knowledge It was one of the inarticulate assumptions of the classical univershysity that such discipline and knowledge was in itself a great good and the means to even greater good
The university today may quite justly be charged with seeking to obtain the ultimate ends of educashytion without paying the price or exacting it from its students It is attempting to prepare young people for life without giving them the intellectual equipshyment that for so many centuries has been regarded as a requisite to the most satisfactory mode of life In this gradual shift of emphasis there is I think much that is unwise It constitutes a direct if someshywhat subtle challenge to values which men from the time of the Greeks have held high The university no longer represents Jeffersons ideal of an institushytion for the development of an intellectual aristocshyracy to which all have an opportunity of membershyship-opportunity it should be noted that is as nearly equal as political democracy can make it While I do not abjure completely the so-called practical ideal in education on the college level I cannot help believing that in the long run that training is most practical which contributes most to the intellectual growth of the student and that it is the peculiar province of the university to afford young people such training if necessary at the exshypense of other attainments Lshy I
) J
The November 1938 4
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Volume I November 1938 Number 2
Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming
by THOMAS BUCK 39
and
GEORGE G_RDNER 3-+
APILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back to the campus the traditional Powwow and its
pre-game pep the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic feud a jam-packed Union lobby luncheons and banshyquets eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts Gi rl Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the camshypus fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decorashytions long files of orange busses bringing high school students the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State game under a perfect football sky and the rhythm and rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday nightshysuch was H omecoming in the year of our school 1938
Even before returning graduates and former stushydents arrived to regi ster in the Union Building Homeshycoming festivities broke loose with the School of Law duck raffle on Friday afternoon Climaxing weeks of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of the Daily Student the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Third Street Medic citadel resulted in a water fight (in paper bags) between the two future professhysional groups
That night the hatchet was temporarily interred while the University and its visiting tlumni attended the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Mens Gym
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18000
Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly and inside there vas fooel talk and Marching Hundred band music Presi ding as A llen G Messick 12
Speakers included Z G Clevenger University director of athletics I -Mens Association President Leroy Sandshyers exos who pledged the support of the Alumni Association to the varsity President Emeritus tVilshyliam Lowe Bryan dubbed for the occasion Heap iVise Man Bill-Lo Bryan President Herman B Wells and Coach A N (Bo) McMillin
Representing the football team of 1893 H a rry McshyDowell a VVinamac attorney reminisced of the grid sport in the old days Benton] Bloom squad of 03
lt and Clair H Scott on the eleven in 13 told of footshyball from their way back when angles Fo ll owing the meal in the gym two freshman teams battled to an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof of the Fieldhouse
Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windyshyand more alumni stopped at the Union desk to identi fy themselves Oldest grad to register was Mark P Helm 94 Indianapolis Those from the greatest distance were Hubert E Rich 25 of ifichita Kan and Fred G White 0S Detroit lv[ich although other
5
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
L E T
SIRs-Congratulations Your fi rst issue was enjoyed very much Revive us Again
tf ILLIAM C SSADY excgt9 Chicago Ill
SIRs-I a m glad to have received the October issue It was a pleasant surprise to read among those giving you adv ice on how to run the magazine a Sullivan lawyer Mr John S Taylor [10 LLBII] once a pupil of mine in a country school in the old home state I think if he will judicia lly appraise the na me [of the magaz in e] now in use he will find it quite suited to the need and if he will inspect the issue now out he will find you had ant icipated such ideas and were on your way
JOHN A CURRY exoI Editor The Dispatch
Douglas Ariz
SIRs-Ive just finished reading the first edi tion of the new magazine and I want to tell you youve got something there I liked especially the twoshypage spread of State Policeman Crabshytree from Gnaw Bone I hope you can dig something like that out for every issue
Only one squeak You should use seven-point type for Alumni Notes I ne ler thought I would be anx iously sca nning an a lumni column to fin d out about my classmates and I had the cheated feeling that somebody was spreading a few names out a wfully fa r when I did do that scanning
I nd ianapolis E ARL H OH 38
The MAGAZINE will try to dig somethi ng out like Officer Crabtree of Gnaw Bone but not for every issue Reason cost Conshytemplated for a fut ure issue is a pictor ial survey o f the Universitys correspondence studen ts
The editoria l board considered well se tshyting the I Knew Him When section in seven-point type two months before Mr Hoffs suggestion was made Idea was abanshydoned because ([) not all alumni have such sharp eyes as Mr Hoff (w ho as editor of the Indiana Daily StudeJlt never wore glasses) and (2) experiments on randomshyse lected alumni during the summer proved they preferred the present ten-point type
Let Subscriber Hoff see the bundles of as yet untyped class new s notes before he makes the charge that somebody was spread ing a few names out awfully far - ED
SIRS-A great many periodicals of all classes come to my desk and thi s [TrIE INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE] is
the most at tractive that I have seen of uni versi ty or collegiate publica-
T E R s tions of thi s kind I wonder if a ll of our alumni realize the work involved in getting out an issue of thi s character
How ARD L W VNEGAR LLBo7 President Commercial
Credi t Company New York
Those on th e ed itoria l boa rd do- Eo
Sms-I hasten to tell you that I like the new magazine It has vim and vigor and gives good g limpses of campus life I particularly like the letters to the ed itors and the edi tori al come-backs
MARY OR IS A ]1 18 Ind ianapolis
You are now reading an other-Eo
S IRs-The new mag looks great a nd we certainly do want our name li sted ior a years subscript ion as well as the membership in the 1 U A lumni Assoshyciation H owever the Missus [E ugenia Huston ex3S ] is quite conshycerned She is just as proud of her a lumni connections as I am but we could hardly use two subscriptions Do you have some sort of a joint membershyship for husband a nd wife Af ter aU two kids from Indiana U get married once in a whi le and methinks someshything should be done
KENNETH A GROW eX 3S Yuma Ariz
Someth ing is don e The ALUMNI MAGAshyZINE well aware of the nuptial tend encies of alum ni offers associate memberships at $[ per yea r for wives (in add iti on to the $3 annually for husba nd s) This provides a j oint subscr iption to the MAGAZINE and two memberships in the A lumni Associa tion - ED
SIRs-Your subscr ipti on reshyquest be fore me Enclosed fi nd my pershysonal check
I am not an Indiana University gradshyuate-hardly an a lumnus as dear good Dr Jordan once reminded me I yearly sent the doctor a birthday greeting Once egotistically I added to the signature Your one-time stushyde nt This was courteously acknowledged but the good doctor inked in following hi s signature Should we say student or matricushylate
Yet those good teachers of Bloomshyington days we re patient with me and tr ied- Coulter Bryan Eigenma lln Woodward Clarke Ross Commons and the fine Frenchman who ra ved as
(Continued on page 27)
1S rIMEI cHfCK-ItP 10 yoliT
0 1IIGtfiil
1===
PROPER LIGHTING MEANS MORE COMFORT AND EYE HEALTH
Plenty of the right kind of ligh t involves a lot more than personal taste Reading workshying sewing or anything that requires accurate sight requires a definite amount of li ght not on ly for comfort but to insure you r eyes against unnecessary strain And far too often the light available is much less than that needed
Take a good look at your lighting Ask at our showroom how you can have Better Light - Better Sight
Siqhlis PRICELESS
liqhf is CHEAP
PUBLIC SERVICE
COMPANY OF INDIANA
E M oSpecial Train
to The Cover all history The influence of a scholar
Lafayette account
Football Game
Indiana vs Purdue
Saturday
November 19 1938
$300 Round Trip
SCHEDULE (Going)
Lv Bloomington 800 a m
Ar Lafayette 1045 a m
(Returning)
Lv Lafayette 730 p m Ar Bloomington 1015 p m
Tickets good returning
on all trains up to No3
Sunday night Nov 20
Travel With the Team
in
Safety and Comfort
For further information call
R F Schmalz C P T A
Phone 3434
MONON 1oute
(Photograph copyright by Harris alld Ewing)
The appointment of Howard R Tolshyley TO as chief of the newly constishytuted Bureau of Agricultural Economshyics in the United States Department of Agriculture was recently announced by Secretary Henry A Wallace This Bureau the secretary announced will include all general programming and planning for adjustment conservation and marketing programs of the deshypartment It will include the Program Planning Division and the general planning for the marketing programs heretofore in the AAA with which Mr Tolley has been associated for the last five years and since June 1936 as adshymin istrator
After graduation Mr Tolley taught for a short time in the high school in Michigan City Ind In 1912 he went to Vashington as mathematician in the Coast and Geodetic Survey and in 1916 became a scientific assistant in farm management in the United States Deshypartment of Agriculture In 1930 he left Washington to become Director of the Giannini Foundation of Agriculshytural Economics He has written proshyfusely A Jist of his published works fills more than six closely typewritten pages
Mr Tolley was born in Howard County in 1889 graduated from Conshyverse High School in 1905 and attended Marion College for one year While in the University he was a member of the University Band and a member of the Euclidean Circle His major subject was mathematics He was married in 1912 to Zora F Hazlett of Rockville Ind They have three sons Grant 22 Elmer r6 and George 12
Great Men Through the courtesy of James Seyshy
bold Adams 23 of N ew York the alumni office was presented with a copy of a new University of Chicago publishycation entitled Great Men It is a partial listing of those persons who have added to the enlightenment of mankind through endowed professorshyships at the University of Chicago
Great Men the author suggests beget great men If it were possible to trace the genealogy of a scholarly strain of a tradition of an idea Wilshyliam Rainey Harper the flashing comet in the western sky of the unishyverse of learning would be seen to have been one of the most fertile men in
is geometric The minds of hundreds of students who will be the scholars of the next generation are molded by a single master Consider just one line of descent Michelson came to Chicago because Harper was there The group of men who made the Universitys physics department the first in the nashytion came to Chicago because Michelshyson was there and among them was Compton In recent years scores of the countrys most promising young physishycists have come to Chicago because Compton was there A similar successhysion of leaders has come down in every department that Harper made great
Harper had used every form of pershysuasion-short of violence-to lure the scholars of the East into Vhat they reshygarded as the intellectual wilderness His success in the face of his own genushyine concern for the fate of the project marked him as a rare master of the arts of choosing men and winning them
The book then lists the names of the twenty-nine scholars who have helel especia lly endowed chairs There are 1)0W twenty-one endowed chairs at the University of Chicago providing for $TOOOO salaries for men either in special chairs or for men in any field These professorships permit the holder to devote a large part of his time to reshysearch and the guidance 0 f graduate workers
There is no doubt that there is such a thing as an overpaid professor but there is also no doubt that it takes money to secure great men-and it takes great men to make a university great
District Councilors On December 10 there will be a
meeting here on the campus of district councilors representing the twenty-five alumni districts in Indiana This meetshying will be for the purpose of continushying with plans for strengthening our alumni program in this state At the initial meeting last spring the councilshyors were given a complete picture of the University-its plans and problemsshyand were asked for their advice and suggestions It is the hope of the alumni office and of those in charge of the Unishyversitys administration that through this method our alumni may be given the opportunity of greater service to their University In like manner it is hoped that through their aid the Unishyversity can become of greater service to alumni students and to the state
THE NOVEMBER 1938
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Continuing the Indiana University Alumni ~uarterly and The Indiana Alumnus
Volume I Number 2
STAFF
GEORGE F HEIGHWAY Co-nienlsEdito-r Cover
ROGER A HURST H OWARD R TOLLEY TO CHIEF BUREAU OF AGRICUL-kallaging poundditol
TURALECONOMICS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENTIVY L CHAMNESS
Associate Editor OF AGR ICULTURE
EDITORIAL BOARD News E Ross Bartley Ward G Biddle ALUMNI RETURN FOR HOMECOMING
Walter S Greenough Thomas Buck and George Gardner 5 lIlrs Alta Brunt Sembower Grads Throng Campus f or Kansas State Game
John E Stempel
SONS AND DAUGHTERS 8 INDIANA UNIVERSITY IvlallY Children of A lutlli Are Ellro lled ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
THE UNIVERSITY IN OCTOBER 9President NTATTHEW VINTERS I S AlYl 17 Indiana polis A Campus News Digest
Vice-Pres JOHN S TAYLOR 10 LLB 11 Sullivan MEETING CALLED T O ORDER q
Secretor) GEORGE F HEI C HWAY LLB22 News of Alumni ClubsBloomington
Treasurer WARD C BIDDLE 16 Bloominglon I KNEW HIM WHEN 20
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Alumni News Notes by Classes 1936middot39
FRNK E ALLEN 16 AM 24 South Bend lIRs KATHARINE CROAN GREENOU GH 11 Features
Indianapolis DONALD A ROGERS LLB27 Bloomington REFLECTION S Fowler V Harper 4
1937middot4() THE NEWS IS rvlY BUSINESS Milton Ronsheim 7 LE)IUpoundL A PITTENGER 07 AMOS Muncie
lIRs ALTA BRUNT SEMBOWER 01 Bloomington THAT HIS WORK MAY LIVE O N I I VAJTER E TREANOR 12 LLB22 JD23
Chicago I TEACH INDIAN CHILDREN Iargaret Winslow T2
1938middot41
DEAN L BARNHART 11 Goshen BENTON J BLOOM ()7 Columbia City Sports
vIRS OLIVE BELDON LEWIS 14 Indianapolis FIGHT~N HOOSIERS George L Gardner 16NEWELL H LONG 28 School of Music alumni
DOUGLAS H -VHITE School of Dentistry a lum ni NEWS NOTES OF VARSITY SPORTS William Buchanan 18
Alumni Secretary IS THE ROD MIGHTIER THAN THE GUN H)GEORGE F HEIGHVr A Y LLBzz
Published monthly except August and Sepmiddot tember by the I ndiana University Alumni Assomiddot Departmentsciation Office of publication 338 E Market S t Tndianapolis I ndia na Editorial office LETTERS l lllion Buildiug Indiana University Bloomingshyton I~ldiana MEMO 2
Annual subscription rate $300 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni Asshy FOR ALUMNAE ONLY Helen Weatherwax 13sociation) Single copies 25 cents
Member of American Alumni CounciL ALUMNI AUTHORS Book Reviews 15Entered to the second class of mail matter
at the post office at Indianapolis Ind under the Act of March 3 1879 IN CLOSING Editorials 32
Iltetleciio-ngt by Fowler V Harper Professor of Law and Chairman
of the University Self-Survey Committee
I N REFLECTING on the purposes and objectives of Indiana University it often occurs to me that
the American conception of a university as an instishytution has undergone a change which while almost imperceptable over a few years is of the greatest significance when observed over a long period Hisshytorically the university was in a very real sense an institution of distinctly higher learning It was a place where the student acquired an erudition in the arts law medicine or theology which represented a sophistication of a definitely high order It was a place where the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of the past was subjected to the distillation of medishytative and critical analysis _Later the university became a laboratory for experimental science-a place where the frontiers of 4nowledge were pushed forward in the search for new truth These funcshytions naturally characterized the university as the habitat of thinkers scholars and men of science In short the principal activity of the institution was intellectual both on the part of the students and the teachers The university was a place where the minds of the students were trained and the minds of the professors were exercised and strengthened Actually there was little difference save in degree between the activities of student and the teacher The one received guidance from the other Each reshyceived stimulus from the -other Thus each conshytributed to the education of the other
The thought is inescapable that the modern unishyversity represents an entirely different type of inshystitution both in aims and in procedure We still
pay lip-service to the traditional patshytern We cling to the same names and labels Howshyever the univershysity today is less concerned with the training of the minds of its stushydents than ~ith the organization of their social and moral prejudices and the cultivashytion of skills and techniques which presumably will be useful to them in their economic
Fowler V Harper lives To put it
in another way we are concerned more with trainshying stuqents for action than training them for thought In this sense the steady trend for several generations has been anti-intellectual in character This program is expressed in many ways and imshyplifd in many others The university must prepare its students to fit into some niche in life It must develop the whole life of the student It must extend its personnel activities to reach every phase of his life It must prepare him to mix to earn a living to become a good citizen
It is not to be denied that these are in a sense quite legitimate and proper objectives The emshyphasis -placed thereon however might be interpreted as an attenuated or eliptical analysis of the univershysitys function It might be assumed that such qualishyties or attainments are desirable and in some inshystances indispensable attributes of life itself to which university training will invariably contribute something of value On the other hand emphasis upon such matters as immediate objectives of the university program is calculated to obscure the unique contribution which such training can make to the good life namely subjection of the mind to the rigorous discipline of scholarship and the arduous task of acquiring knowledge It was one of the inarticulate assumptions of the classical univershysity that such discipline and knowledge was in itself a great good and the means to even greater good
The university today may quite justly be charged with seeking to obtain the ultimate ends of educashytion without paying the price or exacting it from its students It is attempting to prepare young people for life without giving them the intellectual equipshyment that for so many centuries has been regarded as a requisite to the most satisfactory mode of life In this gradual shift of emphasis there is I think much that is unwise It constitutes a direct if someshywhat subtle challenge to values which men from the time of the Greeks have held high The university no longer represents Jeffersons ideal of an institushytion for the development of an intellectual aristocshyracy to which all have an opportunity of membershyship-opportunity it should be noted that is as nearly equal as political democracy can make it While I do not abjure completely the so-called practical ideal in education on the college level I cannot help believing that in the long run that training is most practical which contributes most to the intellectual growth of the student and that it is the peculiar province of the university to afford young people such training if necessary at the exshypense of other attainments Lshy I
) J
The November 1938 4
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Volume I November 1938 Number 2
Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming
by THOMAS BUCK 39
and
GEORGE G_RDNER 3-+
APILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back to the campus the traditional Powwow and its
pre-game pep the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic feud a jam-packed Union lobby luncheons and banshyquets eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts Gi rl Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the camshypus fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decorashytions long files of orange busses bringing high school students the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State game under a perfect football sky and the rhythm and rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday nightshysuch was H omecoming in the year of our school 1938
Even before returning graduates and former stushydents arrived to regi ster in the Union Building Homeshycoming festivities broke loose with the School of Law duck raffle on Friday afternoon Climaxing weeks of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of the Daily Student the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Third Street Medic citadel resulted in a water fight (in paper bags) between the two future professhysional groups
That night the hatchet was temporarily interred while the University and its visiting tlumni attended the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Mens Gym
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18000
Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly and inside there vas fooel talk and Marching Hundred band music Presi ding as A llen G Messick 12
Speakers included Z G Clevenger University director of athletics I -Mens Association President Leroy Sandshyers exos who pledged the support of the Alumni Association to the varsity President Emeritus tVilshyliam Lowe Bryan dubbed for the occasion Heap iVise Man Bill-Lo Bryan President Herman B Wells and Coach A N (Bo) McMillin
Representing the football team of 1893 H a rry McshyDowell a VVinamac attorney reminisced of the grid sport in the old days Benton] Bloom squad of 03
lt and Clair H Scott on the eleven in 13 told of footshyball from their way back when angles Fo ll owing the meal in the gym two freshman teams battled to an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof of the Fieldhouse
Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windyshyand more alumni stopped at the Union desk to identi fy themselves Oldest grad to register was Mark P Helm 94 Indianapolis Those from the greatest distance were Hubert E Rich 25 of ifichita Kan and Fred G White 0S Detroit lv[ich although other
5
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
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Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
E M oSpecial Train
to The Cover all history The influence of a scholar
Lafayette account
Football Game
Indiana vs Purdue
Saturday
November 19 1938
$300 Round Trip
SCHEDULE (Going)
Lv Bloomington 800 a m
Ar Lafayette 1045 a m
(Returning)
Lv Lafayette 730 p m Ar Bloomington 1015 p m
Tickets good returning
on all trains up to No3
Sunday night Nov 20
Travel With the Team
in
Safety and Comfort
For further information call
R F Schmalz C P T A
Phone 3434
MONON 1oute
(Photograph copyright by Harris alld Ewing)
The appointment of Howard R Tolshyley TO as chief of the newly constishytuted Bureau of Agricultural Economshyics in the United States Department of Agriculture was recently announced by Secretary Henry A Wallace This Bureau the secretary announced will include all general programming and planning for adjustment conservation and marketing programs of the deshypartment It will include the Program Planning Division and the general planning for the marketing programs heretofore in the AAA with which Mr Tolley has been associated for the last five years and since June 1936 as adshymin istrator
After graduation Mr Tolley taught for a short time in the high school in Michigan City Ind In 1912 he went to Vashington as mathematician in the Coast and Geodetic Survey and in 1916 became a scientific assistant in farm management in the United States Deshypartment of Agriculture In 1930 he left Washington to become Director of the Giannini Foundation of Agriculshytural Economics He has written proshyfusely A Jist of his published works fills more than six closely typewritten pages
Mr Tolley was born in Howard County in 1889 graduated from Conshyverse High School in 1905 and attended Marion College for one year While in the University he was a member of the University Band and a member of the Euclidean Circle His major subject was mathematics He was married in 1912 to Zora F Hazlett of Rockville Ind They have three sons Grant 22 Elmer r6 and George 12
Great Men Through the courtesy of James Seyshy
bold Adams 23 of N ew York the alumni office was presented with a copy of a new University of Chicago publishycation entitled Great Men It is a partial listing of those persons who have added to the enlightenment of mankind through endowed professorshyships at the University of Chicago
Great Men the author suggests beget great men If it were possible to trace the genealogy of a scholarly strain of a tradition of an idea Wilshyliam Rainey Harper the flashing comet in the western sky of the unishyverse of learning would be seen to have been one of the most fertile men in
is geometric The minds of hundreds of students who will be the scholars of the next generation are molded by a single master Consider just one line of descent Michelson came to Chicago because Harper was there The group of men who made the Universitys physics department the first in the nashytion came to Chicago because Michelshyson was there and among them was Compton In recent years scores of the countrys most promising young physishycists have come to Chicago because Compton was there A similar successhysion of leaders has come down in every department that Harper made great
Harper had used every form of pershysuasion-short of violence-to lure the scholars of the East into Vhat they reshygarded as the intellectual wilderness His success in the face of his own genushyine concern for the fate of the project marked him as a rare master of the arts of choosing men and winning them
The book then lists the names of the twenty-nine scholars who have helel especia lly endowed chairs There are 1)0W twenty-one endowed chairs at the University of Chicago providing for $TOOOO salaries for men either in special chairs or for men in any field These professorships permit the holder to devote a large part of his time to reshysearch and the guidance 0 f graduate workers
There is no doubt that there is such a thing as an overpaid professor but there is also no doubt that it takes money to secure great men-and it takes great men to make a university great
District Councilors On December 10 there will be a
meeting here on the campus of district councilors representing the twenty-five alumni districts in Indiana This meetshying will be for the purpose of continushying with plans for strengthening our alumni program in this state At the initial meeting last spring the councilshyors were given a complete picture of the University-its plans and problemsshyand were asked for their advice and suggestions It is the hope of the alumni office and of those in charge of the Unishyversitys administration that through this method our alumni may be given the opportunity of greater service to their University In like manner it is hoped that through their aid the Unishyversity can become of greater service to alumni students and to the state
THE NOVEMBER 1938
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Continuing the Indiana University Alumni ~uarterly and The Indiana Alumnus
Volume I Number 2
STAFF
GEORGE F HEIGHWAY Co-nienlsEdito-r Cover
ROGER A HURST H OWARD R TOLLEY TO CHIEF BUREAU OF AGRICUL-kallaging poundditol
TURALECONOMICS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENTIVY L CHAMNESS
Associate Editor OF AGR ICULTURE
EDITORIAL BOARD News E Ross Bartley Ward G Biddle ALUMNI RETURN FOR HOMECOMING
Walter S Greenough Thomas Buck and George Gardner 5 lIlrs Alta Brunt Sembower Grads Throng Campus f or Kansas State Game
John E Stempel
SONS AND DAUGHTERS 8 INDIANA UNIVERSITY IvlallY Children of A lutlli Are Ellro lled ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
THE UNIVERSITY IN OCTOBER 9President NTATTHEW VINTERS I S AlYl 17 Indiana polis A Campus News Digest
Vice-Pres JOHN S TAYLOR 10 LLB 11 Sullivan MEETING CALLED T O ORDER q
Secretor) GEORGE F HEI C HWAY LLB22 News of Alumni ClubsBloomington
Treasurer WARD C BIDDLE 16 Bloominglon I KNEW HIM WHEN 20
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Alumni News Notes by Classes 1936middot39
FRNK E ALLEN 16 AM 24 South Bend lIRs KATHARINE CROAN GREENOU GH 11 Features
Indianapolis DONALD A ROGERS LLB27 Bloomington REFLECTION S Fowler V Harper 4
1937middot4() THE NEWS IS rvlY BUSINESS Milton Ronsheim 7 LE)IUpoundL A PITTENGER 07 AMOS Muncie
lIRs ALTA BRUNT SEMBOWER 01 Bloomington THAT HIS WORK MAY LIVE O N I I VAJTER E TREANOR 12 LLB22 JD23
Chicago I TEACH INDIAN CHILDREN Iargaret Winslow T2
1938middot41
DEAN L BARNHART 11 Goshen BENTON J BLOOM ()7 Columbia City Sports
vIRS OLIVE BELDON LEWIS 14 Indianapolis FIGHT~N HOOSIERS George L Gardner 16NEWELL H LONG 28 School of Music alumni
DOUGLAS H -VHITE School of Dentistry a lum ni NEWS NOTES OF VARSITY SPORTS William Buchanan 18
Alumni Secretary IS THE ROD MIGHTIER THAN THE GUN H)GEORGE F HEIGHVr A Y LLBzz
Published monthly except August and Sepmiddot tember by the I ndiana University Alumni Assomiddot Departmentsciation Office of publication 338 E Market S t Tndianapolis I ndia na Editorial office LETTERS l lllion Buildiug Indiana University Bloomingshyton I~ldiana MEMO 2
Annual subscription rate $300 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni Asshy FOR ALUMNAE ONLY Helen Weatherwax 13sociation) Single copies 25 cents
Member of American Alumni CounciL ALUMNI AUTHORS Book Reviews 15Entered to the second class of mail matter
at the post office at Indianapolis Ind under the Act of March 3 1879 IN CLOSING Editorials 32
Iltetleciio-ngt by Fowler V Harper Professor of Law and Chairman
of the University Self-Survey Committee
I N REFLECTING on the purposes and objectives of Indiana University it often occurs to me that
the American conception of a university as an instishytution has undergone a change which while almost imperceptable over a few years is of the greatest significance when observed over a long period Hisshytorically the university was in a very real sense an institution of distinctly higher learning It was a place where the student acquired an erudition in the arts law medicine or theology which represented a sophistication of a definitely high order It was a place where the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of the past was subjected to the distillation of medishytative and critical analysis _Later the university became a laboratory for experimental science-a place where the frontiers of 4nowledge were pushed forward in the search for new truth These funcshytions naturally characterized the university as the habitat of thinkers scholars and men of science In short the principal activity of the institution was intellectual both on the part of the students and the teachers The university was a place where the minds of the students were trained and the minds of the professors were exercised and strengthened Actually there was little difference save in degree between the activities of student and the teacher The one received guidance from the other Each reshyceived stimulus from the -other Thus each conshytributed to the education of the other
The thought is inescapable that the modern unishyversity represents an entirely different type of inshystitution both in aims and in procedure We still
pay lip-service to the traditional patshytern We cling to the same names and labels Howshyever the univershysity today is less concerned with the training of the minds of its stushydents than ~ith the organization of their social and moral prejudices and the cultivashytion of skills and techniques which presumably will be useful to them in their economic
Fowler V Harper lives To put it
in another way we are concerned more with trainshying stuqents for action than training them for thought In this sense the steady trend for several generations has been anti-intellectual in character This program is expressed in many ways and imshyplifd in many others The university must prepare its students to fit into some niche in life It must develop the whole life of the student It must extend its personnel activities to reach every phase of his life It must prepare him to mix to earn a living to become a good citizen
It is not to be denied that these are in a sense quite legitimate and proper objectives The emshyphasis -placed thereon however might be interpreted as an attenuated or eliptical analysis of the univershysitys function It might be assumed that such qualishyties or attainments are desirable and in some inshystances indispensable attributes of life itself to which university training will invariably contribute something of value On the other hand emphasis upon such matters as immediate objectives of the university program is calculated to obscure the unique contribution which such training can make to the good life namely subjection of the mind to the rigorous discipline of scholarship and the arduous task of acquiring knowledge It was one of the inarticulate assumptions of the classical univershysity that such discipline and knowledge was in itself a great good and the means to even greater good
The university today may quite justly be charged with seeking to obtain the ultimate ends of educashytion without paying the price or exacting it from its students It is attempting to prepare young people for life without giving them the intellectual equipshyment that for so many centuries has been regarded as a requisite to the most satisfactory mode of life In this gradual shift of emphasis there is I think much that is unwise It constitutes a direct if someshywhat subtle challenge to values which men from the time of the Greeks have held high The university no longer represents Jeffersons ideal of an institushytion for the development of an intellectual aristocshyracy to which all have an opportunity of membershyship-opportunity it should be noted that is as nearly equal as political democracy can make it While I do not abjure completely the so-called practical ideal in education on the college level I cannot help believing that in the long run that training is most practical which contributes most to the intellectual growth of the student and that it is the peculiar province of the university to afford young people such training if necessary at the exshypense of other attainments Lshy I
) J
The November 1938 4
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Volume I November 1938 Number 2
Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming
by THOMAS BUCK 39
and
GEORGE G_RDNER 3-+
APILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back to the campus the traditional Powwow and its
pre-game pep the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic feud a jam-packed Union lobby luncheons and banshyquets eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts Gi rl Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the camshypus fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decorashytions long files of orange busses bringing high school students the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State game under a perfect football sky and the rhythm and rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday nightshysuch was H omecoming in the year of our school 1938
Even before returning graduates and former stushydents arrived to regi ster in the Union Building Homeshycoming festivities broke loose with the School of Law duck raffle on Friday afternoon Climaxing weeks of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of the Daily Student the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Third Street Medic citadel resulted in a water fight (in paper bags) between the two future professhysional groups
That night the hatchet was temporarily interred while the University and its visiting tlumni attended the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Mens Gym
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18000
Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly and inside there vas fooel talk and Marching Hundred band music Presi ding as A llen G Messick 12
Speakers included Z G Clevenger University director of athletics I -Mens Association President Leroy Sandshyers exos who pledged the support of the Alumni Association to the varsity President Emeritus tVilshyliam Lowe Bryan dubbed for the occasion Heap iVise Man Bill-Lo Bryan President Herman B Wells and Coach A N (Bo) McMillin
Representing the football team of 1893 H a rry McshyDowell a VVinamac attorney reminisced of the grid sport in the old days Benton] Bloom squad of 03
lt and Clair H Scott on the eleven in 13 told of footshyball from their way back when angles Fo ll owing the meal in the gym two freshman teams battled to an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof of the Fieldhouse
Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windyshyand more alumni stopped at the Union desk to identi fy themselves Oldest grad to register was Mark P Helm 94 Indianapolis Those from the greatest distance were Hubert E Rich 25 of ifichita Kan and Fred G White 0S Detroit lv[ich although other
5
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
THE NOVEMBER 1938
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Continuing the Indiana University Alumni ~uarterly and The Indiana Alumnus
Volume I Number 2
STAFF
GEORGE F HEIGHWAY Co-nienlsEdito-r Cover
ROGER A HURST H OWARD R TOLLEY TO CHIEF BUREAU OF AGRICUL-kallaging poundditol
TURALECONOMICS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENTIVY L CHAMNESS
Associate Editor OF AGR ICULTURE
EDITORIAL BOARD News E Ross Bartley Ward G Biddle ALUMNI RETURN FOR HOMECOMING
Walter S Greenough Thomas Buck and George Gardner 5 lIlrs Alta Brunt Sembower Grads Throng Campus f or Kansas State Game
John E Stempel
SONS AND DAUGHTERS 8 INDIANA UNIVERSITY IvlallY Children of A lutlli Are Ellro lled ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
THE UNIVERSITY IN OCTOBER 9President NTATTHEW VINTERS I S AlYl 17 Indiana polis A Campus News Digest
Vice-Pres JOHN S TAYLOR 10 LLB 11 Sullivan MEETING CALLED T O ORDER q
Secretor) GEORGE F HEI C HWAY LLB22 News of Alumni ClubsBloomington
Treasurer WARD C BIDDLE 16 Bloominglon I KNEW HIM WHEN 20
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Alumni News Notes by Classes 1936middot39
FRNK E ALLEN 16 AM 24 South Bend lIRs KATHARINE CROAN GREENOU GH 11 Features
Indianapolis DONALD A ROGERS LLB27 Bloomington REFLECTION S Fowler V Harper 4
1937middot4() THE NEWS IS rvlY BUSINESS Milton Ronsheim 7 LE)IUpoundL A PITTENGER 07 AMOS Muncie
lIRs ALTA BRUNT SEMBOWER 01 Bloomington THAT HIS WORK MAY LIVE O N I I VAJTER E TREANOR 12 LLB22 JD23
Chicago I TEACH INDIAN CHILDREN Iargaret Winslow T2
1938middot41
DEAN L BARNHART 11 Goshen BENTON J BLOOM ()7 Columbia City Sports
vIRS OLIVE BELDON LEWIS 14 Indianapolis FIGHT~N HOOSIERS George L Gardner 16NEWELL H LONG 28 School of Music alumni
DOUGLAS H -VHITE School of Dentistry a lum ni NEWS NOTES OF VARSITY SPORTS William Buchanan 18
Alumni Secretary IS THE ROD MIGHTIER THAN THE GUN H)GEORGE F HEIGHVr A Y LLBzz
Published monthly except August and Sepmiddot tember by the I ndiana University Alumni Assomiddot Departmentsciation Office of publication 338 E Market S t Tndianapolis I ndia na Editorial office LETTERS l lllion Buildiug Indiana University Bloomingshyton I~ldiana MEMO 2
Annual subscription rate $300 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni Asshy FOR ALUMNAE ONLY Helen Weatherwax 13sociation) Single copies 25 cents
Member of American Alumni CounciL ALUMNI AUTHORS Book Reviews 15Entered to the second class of mail matter
at the post office at Indianapolis Ind under the Act of March 3 1879 IN CLOSING Editorials 32
Iltetleciio-ngt by Fowler V Harper Professor of Law and Chairman
of the University Self-Survey Committee
I N REFLECTING on the purposes and objectives of Indiana University it often occurs to me that
the American conception of a university as an instishytution has undergone a change which while almost imperceptable over a few years is of the greatest significance when observed over a long period Hisshytorically the university was in a very real sense an institution of distinctly higher learning It was a place where the student acquired an erudition in the arts law medicine or theology which represented a sophistication of a definitely high order It was a place where the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of the past was subjected to the distillation of medishytative and critical analysis _Later the university became a laboratory for experimental science-a place where the frontiers of 4nowledge were pushed forward in the search for new truth These funcshytions naturally characterized the university as the habitat of thinkers scholars and men of science In short the principal activity of the institution was intellectual both on the part of the students and the teachers The university was a place where the minds of the students were trained and the minds of the professors were exercised and strengthened Actually there was little difference save in degree between the activities of student and the teacher The one received guidance from the other Each reshyceived stimulus from the -other Thus each conshytributed to the education of the other
The thought is inescapable that the modern unishyversity represents an entirely different type of inshystitution both in aims and in procedure We still
pay lip-service to the traditional patshytern We cling to the same names and labels Howshyever the univershysity today is less concerned with the training of the minds of its stushydents than ~ith the organization of their social and moral prejudices and the cultivashytion of skills and techniques which presumably will be useful to them in their economic
Fowler V Harper lives To put it
in another way we are concerned more with trainshying stuqents for action than training them for thought In this sense the steady trend for several generations has been anti-intellectual in character This program is expressed in many ways and imshyplifd in many others The university must prepare its students to fit into some niche in life It must develop the whole life of the student It must extend its personnel activities to reach every phase of his life It must prepare him to mix to earn a living to become a good citizen
It is not to be denied that these are in a sense quite legitimate and proper objectives The emshyphasis -placed thereon however might be interpreted as an attenuated or eliptical analysis of the univershysitys function It might be assumed that such qualishyties or attainments are desirable and in some inshystances indispensable attributes of life itself to which university training will invariably contribute something of value On the other hand emphasis upon such matters as immediate objectives of the university program is calculated to obscure the unique contribution which such training can make to the good life namely subjection of the mind to the rigorous discipline of scholarship and the arduous task of acquiring knowledge It was one of the inarticulate assumptions of the classical univershysity that such discipline and knowledge was in itself a great good and the means to even greater good
The university today may quite justly be charged with seeking to obtain the ultimate ends of educashytion without paying the price or exacting it from its students It is attempting to prepare young people for life without giving them the intellectual equipshyment that for so many centuries has been regarded as a requisite to the most satisfactory mode of life In this gradual shift of emphasis there is I think much that is unwise It constitutes a direct if someshywhat subtle challenge to values which men from the time of the Greeks have held high The university no longer represents Jeffersons ideal of an institushytion for the development of an intellectual aristocshyracy to which all have an opportunity of membershyship-opportunity it should be noted that is as nearly equal as political democracy can make it While I do not abjure completely the so-called practical ideal in education on the college level I cannot help believing that in the long run that training is most practical which contributes most to the intellectual growth of the student and that it is the peculiar province of the university to afford young people such training if necessary at the exshypense of other attainments Lshy I
) J
The November 1938 4
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Volume I November 1938 Number 2
Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming
by THOMAS BUCK 39
and
GEORGE G_RDNER 3-+
APILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back to the campus the traditional Powwow and its
pre-game pep the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic feud a jam-packed Union lobby luncheons and banshyquets eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts Gi rl Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the camshypus fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decorashytions long files of orange busses bringing high school students the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State game under a perfect football sky and the rhythm and rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday nightshysuch was H omecoming in the year of our school 1938
Even before returning graduates and former stushydents arrived to regi ster in the Union Building Homeshycoming festivities broke loose with the School of Law duck raffle on Friday afternoon Climaxing weeks of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of the Daily Student the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Third Street Medic citadel resulted in a water fight (in paper bags) between the two future professhysional groups
That night the hatchet was temporarily interred while the University and its visiting tlumni attended the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Mens Gym
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18000
Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly and inside there vas fooel talk and Marching Hundred band music Presi ding as A llen G Messick 12
Speakers included Z G Clevenger University director of athletics I -Mens Association President Leroy Sandshyers exos who pledged the support of the Alumni Association to the varsity President Emeritus tVilshyliam Lowe Bryan dubbed for the occasion Heap iVise Man Bill-Lo Bryan President Herman B Wells and Coach A N (Bo) McMillin
Representing the football team of 1893 H a rry McshyDowell a VVinamac attorney reminisced of the grid sport in the old days Benton] Bloom squad of 03
lt and Clair H Scott on the eleven in 13 told of footshyball from their way back when angles Fo ll owing the meal in the gym two freshman teams battled to an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof of the Fieldhouse
Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windyshyand more alumni stopped at the Union desk to identi fy themselves Oldest grad to register was Mark P Helm 94 Indianapolis Those from the greatest distance were Hubert E Rich 25 of ifichita Kan and Fred G White 0S Detroit lv[ich although other
5
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
Iltetleciio-ngt by Fowler V Harper Professor of Law and Chairman
of the University Self-Survey Committee
I N REFLECTING on the purposes and objectives of Indiana University it often occurs to me that
the American conception of a university as an instishytution has undergone a change which while almost imperceptable over a few years is of the greatest significance when observed over a long period Hisshytorically the university was in a very real sense an institution of distinctly higher learning It was a place where the student acquired an erudition in the arts law medicine or theology which represented a sophistication of a definitely high order It was a place where the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of the past was subjected to the distillation of medishytative and critical analysis _Later the university became a laboratory for experimental science-a place where the frontiers of 4nowledge were pushed forward in the search for new truth These funcshytions naturally characterized the university as the habitat of thinkers scholars and men of science In short the principal activity of the institution was intellectual both on the part of the students and the teachers The university was a place where the minds of the students were trained and the minds of the professors were exercised and strengthened Actually there was little difference save in degree between the activities of student and the teacher The one received guidance from the other Each reshyceived stimulus from the -other Thus each conshytributed to the education of the other
The thought is inescapable that the modern unishyversity represents an entirely different type of inshystitution both in aims and in procedure We still
pay lip-service to the traditional patshytern We cling to the same names and labels Howshyever the univershysity today is less concerned with the training of the minds of its stushydents than ~ith the organization of their social and moral prejudices and the cultivashytion of skills and techniques which presumably will be useful to them in their economic
Fowler V Harper lives To put it
in another way we are concerned more with trainshying stuqents for action than training them for thought In this sense the steady trend for several generations has been anti-intellectual in character This program is expressed in many ways and imshyplifd in many others The university must prepare its students to fit into some niche in life It must develop the whole life of the student It must extend its personnel activities to reach every phase of his life It must prepare him to mix to earn a living to become a good citizen
It is not to be denied that these are in a sense quite legitimate and proper objectives The emshyphasis -placed thereon however might be interpreted as an attenuated or eliptical analysis of the univershysitys function It might be assumed that such qualishyties or attainments are desirable and in some inshystances indispensable attributes of life itself to which university training will invariably contribute something of value On the other hand emphasis upon such matters as immediate objectives of the university program is calculated to obscure the unique contribution which such training can make to the good life namely subjection of the mind to the rigorous discipline of scholarship and the arduous task of acquiring knowledge It was one of the inarticulate assumptions of the classical univershysity that such discipline and knowledge was in itself a great good and the means to even greater good
The university today may quite justly be charged with seeking to obtain the ultimate ends of educashytion without paying the price or exacting it from its students It is attempting to prepare young people for life without giving them the intellectual equipshyment that for so many centuries has been regarded as a requisite to the most satisfactory mode of life In this gradual shift of emphasis there is I think much that is unwise It constitutes a direct if someshywhat subtle challenge to values which men from the time of the Greeks have held high The university no longer represents Jeffersons ideal of an institushytion for the development of an intellectual aristocshyracy to which all have an opportunity of membershyship-opportunity it should be noted that is as nearly equal as political democracy can make it While I do not abjure completely the so-called practical ideal in education on the college level I cannot help believing that in the long run that training is most practical which contributes most to the intellectual growth of the student and that it is the peculiar province of the university to afford young people such training if necessary at the exshypense of other attainments Lshy I
) J
The November 1938 4
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Volume I November 1938 Number 2
Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming
by THOMAS BUCK 39
and
GEORGE G_RDNER 3-+
APILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back to the campus the traditional Powwow and its
pre-game pep the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic feud a jam-packed Union lobby luncheons and banshyquets eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts Gi rl Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the camshypus fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decorashytions long files of orange busses bringing high school students the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State game under a perfect football sky and the rhythm and rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday nightshysuch was H omecoming in the year of our school 1938
Even before returning graduates and former stushydents arrived to regi ster in the Union Building Homeshycoming festivities broke loose with the School of Law duck raffle on Friday afternoon Climaxing weeks of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of the Daily Student the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Third Street Medic citadel resulted in a water fight (in paper bags) between the two future professhysional groups
That night the hatchet was temporarily interred while the University and its visiting tlumni attended the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Mens Gym
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18000
Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly and inside there vas fooel talk and Marching Hundred band music Presi ding as A llen G Messick 12
Speakers included Z G Clevenger University director of athletics I -Mens Association President Leroy Sandshyers exos who pledged the support of the Alumni Association to the varsity President Emeritus tVilshyliam Lowe Bryan dubbed for the occasion Heap iVise Man Bill-Lo Bryan President Herman B Wells and Coach A N (Bo) McMillin
Representing the football team of 1893 H a rry McshyDowell a VVinamac attorney reminisced of the grid sport in the old days Benton] Bloom squad of 03
lt and Clair H Scott on the eleven in 13 told of footshyball from their way back when angles Fo ll owing the meal in the gym two freshman teams battled to an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof of the Fieldhouse
Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windyshyand more alumni stopped at the Union desk to identi fy themselves Oldest grad to register was Mark P Helm 94 Indianapolis Those from the greatest distance were Hubert E Rich 25 of ifichita Kan and Fred G White 0S Detroit lv[ich although other
5
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Volume I November 1938 Number 2
Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming
by THOMAS BUCK 39
and
GEORGE G_RDNER 3-+
APILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back to the campus the traditional Powwow and its
pre-game pep the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic feud a jam-packed Union lobby luncheons and banshyquets eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts Gi rl Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the camshypus fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decorashytions long files of orange busses bringing high school students the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State game under a perfect football sky and the rhythm and rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday nightshysuch was H omecoming in the year of our school 1938
Even before returning graduates and former stushydents arrived to regi ster in the Union Building Homeshycoming festivities broke loose with the School of Law duck raffle on Friday afternoon Climaxing weeks of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of the Daily Student the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Third Street Medic citadel resulted in a water fight (in paper bags) between the two future professhysional groups
That night the hatchet was temporarily interred while the University and its visiting tlumni attended the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Mens Gym
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18000
Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly and inside there vas fooel talk and Marching Hundred band music Presi ding as A llen G Messick 12
Speakers included Z G Clevenger University director of athletics I -Mens Association President Leroy Sandshyers exos who pledged the support of the Alumni Association to the varsity President Emeritus tVilshyliam Lowe Bryan dubbed for the occasion Heap iVise Man Bill-Lo Bryan President Herman B Wells and Coach A N (Bo) McMillin
Representing the football team of 1893 H a rry McshyDowell a VVinamac attorney reminisced of the grid sport in the old days Benton] Bloom squad of 03
lt and Clair H Scott on the eleven in 13 told of footshyball from their way back when angles Fo ll owing the meal in the gym two freshman teams battled to an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof of the Fieldhouse
Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windyshyand more alumni stopped at the Union desk to identi fy themselves Oldest grad to register was Mark P Helm 94 Indianapolis Those from the greatest distance were Hubert E Rich 25 of ifichita Kan and Fred G White 0S Detroit lv[ich although other
5
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
alumni from further away may have arrived on the campus just in time for the kick-off
As those not inclined to battle ere touring the Quadrangle and adjacent streets eyeing the organshyization houses Homecoming decorations or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union tower friends and foes of the Schools of Law and Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the shyster-quack softball game successor to the bloody football tilts of other years
The Medics won I2-7 and both sides retired to the nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war A greased rope had previously been borrowed from the Monon and although it once was used to pull around locomotives and other rolling stock it broke twice during the fray From the second break on it was anybodys guess as to who was doing what White-smocked Medics wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats pumshymelled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant camshypus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the handshylettered thundermug won earlier by the Medics by virtue of their sof tball victory
Three hundred graduates and former students atshytended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday noon and a thousand other visitors were served in the University Commons Shortly after twelve oclock visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the gym each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign placard then began the parade through the city This done Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial Stadium here already the horseshoes concrete sides were filling with colorful bits of humanity
Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and clacked in the press box the ubiquitous program and coke salesmen stalked the aisles one more grade school fan pressed his face between the bars of the fence at the open end of the stadium the JU band
John F Lindsey13 and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) Scott17 talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday
Dixie Heighway 22 morning
with its four drum majors strutted down the field the teams loped out from the dressing rooms came the toss of the referees coin the line-up the kick-off and the Homecoming game was on
Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown
It was during this game that the Fightin Hoosiers scored their first touchdown of the season but it was not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the vVestern visitors The final SCOre was Kansas State 13 Indiana 6
Putting a patched-up lineup on the field Indiana started off in a determined manner advancing to the Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter This proved to be Indiana s only real scoring threat of the game beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter
Indiana started from its own 29-yard line Vith Vincent Oliver Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen carrying the ball Ind iana made three consecutive fi rst downs before a series of passes failed Nicholson attempted a field goal which was blocked
Advancing again to the Kansas State 43 Nicholson tossed a long pass to Graham which was fumbled and Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS
Following an exchange of punts Kansas State took the ball on its own 30 Seelye back to pass was chased back to the Kansas State ra but he eluded a pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on the Kansas State 35 Crumbaker threaded his way down the field to the Indiana 8 Hackney Kansas State fullback plunged to the Indiana 5 where he fumbled Bill Smith recovered for Indiana
Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48 Seelye passed to Munzer on the Indiana 34 and then ran to the Indishyana 25 Hackney plunged to the 23 and Seelye passed to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown Brock converted making the score Kansas State 7 Indiana o (Continued on page 28)
White-smocked Medics hold When the shyster-quack aloft the Law-Medic Thunshy tug-of-war rope broke Laws
dermug baseball feud and Medics rolled in the trophy stagnant Jordan
Th e November 1988 6
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
by MILTON RONSHEIM ex 17
Editor-Manager The Cadi - (Ohio) RepltbliclIll
The News Is My Business [Typical of Americas 4218 shirt-sleeved jackshy
of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIilshyton Ronsheim ex17 Typical also of the nations rural press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN established in 1815 in a county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio where the hills peak wlldl~gt before the state begins its dip down toward the river and the P1ttsbu-rgh country This is Ronsheims story knocked out he says in moments taken from maling up forms for printing ballots His picture abOve is the best I have time for with a murder trial taking about all my time All quotes in the article are from the C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N-EOITOR S NOTE]
MUCH water has passed over the dam since I tried to run or talk a point for Indiana in track or
debate Or since that time back in 1913 when attendshying what I remember as Indianas first state basketball tournament I spent a night talking with Dutch Krause at the Phi Psi house His fame as the man who had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of the campus then Now a quarter of a century later my only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time Indiana plays O S U
But remembrances of things past remain The old board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are still fresh in memory And scattered over the world are people who have a deep but rarely expressed affection for Indiana They are just neither bigwigs nor small fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other average citizens Many are in the smaller places like I am And like me many are tempted to stop every car with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask the occupants what part of the Hoosi er state they hail from
I~DIANA ALUVINI IAGAZINE
But to the newspaper business Vhen I was in the University I ignored the course in journa lism for my bent was toward law So a printing course at Carnegie Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special preparation toward becoming a country editor
After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I U friend in the army post office at Milan ) I became hooked up with this old weekly paper the Cadis Reshypublican
The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet on vVednesday September 21 at 200 oclock at the home of Mrs Birney Hines Catherine M egaw will be the leader
My friend Steve Noland editor of the Indianapolis News once told me that his real ambition was to edit a good country weekly In a way a small town editor has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metroshypolitan daily Everything he does of course is small by comparison but it has a mighty intimate and pershysonal touch which is lost through bigness
The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom you have often spoken If the Jones have a baby and you dont mention it you are apt to lose friends for youve surely known for some time that the event was expected And you surely knew that Sally Brown was home over Sunday for you saw her at church So dont forget an item about her Most of your news is pershysonal about things and people you yourself know The little things you publish are fireside chatter more intershyesting than a murder or a landslide in Colorado
You not only write the news and editorials but you follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)
7
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
Sons And Daughters Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers
Come Members of the Next 1 U Generation
ON THE forested Bloominglon campus for the first time this fall are many sons and daughters of
another generation of 1 U students-children of gradshyuates or former students who attended the University when Assembly Hall was the auditorium the sororities were on Forest Place and the library went around one corner and stopped short without any of the wings and turns it now has
Large also is the number o f freshmen who are cousins nephews nieces brothers or s isters of alumni Perhaps the most-relatived freshman on the campus this fall is Julia Dietrich of Bloomington Three brothshyers and the same number of sisters have preceded her at 1 U Her way was pavee by William Dietrich 29 Irene Dietrich Rose 30 Kathleen Dietrich )3
AM37 James Dietrich 36 lVID38 and Dorothy 36 AmiddotM37 Another brother Richard is now a senior
Close behind Miss Dietrich comes Hazel A Cottrell freshman from Monticello She is the sister of A Presshyton Cottrell Jr ex3 ( Joseph F Cottrell ex35 and Dean Cottrell ex4o From Manilla Ind comes Nilshyliam Inlow Sheedy who as preceded at Indiana by
three uncles Fred Inlow ex2 1 Hershybert Inlow ex2 l and De Prey Inshylow ex I4
The follow ing is a list of students entering the Unishyversity for the first time this fall who are the sons and daughters of alumni This list was taken from the students own registration cards AD~MS Fred Leon-son
of Mrs Walte r H Adams (Goldie C Burks ex17)
ANDERSON Cla rence Joshyseph-son of Fred L Anderson Z6 AM29Typical of alumni sons and daughshy and Esther Luse Anmiddot
ters are the Glenns Jean 40 derson 26 AM31 (right) and Alfred 42 They are the ND ERS ON William Yinmiddot children of E R Glenn and Mary cent-soil of R J
Anderson 07 MD15Easley Glenn both 13 of Pomp- and Clara Hood Anmiddot ton Plains N J derson ex12
AKDREW S Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C -ndews 07 ANTRIM Jame s Grant- son of X G Antrim cx14 ARBURN Rosetnnry Katherine-daughter of L V Arburn 15 IS31 ARCHIBALD Joanna-daughter of Paul C Archibald ex22 ARMSTRONG 1lary J ane-daught e r of iIary Duncan Armstrong cx20 ASHER J a mes Wilding- son of E 0 Asher 12 MD14 AVERY Robert Daniel- son of M P Avery 07 BAGBY Paul Robert- son of W A BaRby exll HAILEY Francis Ray-so n of Edith Atkinson Bailey ex12 RALL Vaen Philip-son o f Clay A Ball 02 BATCHELOR Jam es Woodford-son of James O Batchelor 09 BIDDLE Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G Biddle 16 and Mrs Biddle 29 BIKELY Ramon Cha rl es--son of R F Blakely ex05 BOGGS M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs 23 BONSIB Joan-d aught e r of Louis W Bonsib 16 COTKIN L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin ex2S BRUpound Ralph Waldo J r-son of Ralph V Bruner ex13 BlRKHoLDEn Virginin--ltiaughter of Hilda Clyne Burkholder e 16 BUTLER l11adorie Tan aughter of Eugene B Butler 27 CALL Dear J acksOn-son of Edgar J Call 12 CAAPFNTER Taletha LaVern-daughter of ~frs Grace Carpenter ex32 CHAPPEIL Mary Kathryn-ltlaughter of John K Chappell emiddot05 C HATTI N Robert Na thani elmiddot -SOn of Clyde N Cbattin 12 LL B 13 CLINTON Evelyn Elinor-ltlaughter of Alfred Clinton ex I S DAUBENHEYER iiles Frederick-son of Miles F Dau benh eye r 04 ~rDmiddot07 DAVIS Jane Louisc--ti a ughte r of Ceo H Davis NfD09 DAVIS Richard Merrill- son of Merrill S Davis 1 2 MD14 DecKARD J ohn Charles--lt()n of C W Deckard 12 DeCKER Richard Harvey- son of Harvey B Decker 16 MD19 DICKEY Dyrck-middotson of Guy Di ckey 25 DICKSON George Robert-son of Albert Dickson exI8 DINGLE Marian Elizabeth - daughter of Frank E Dingle ex12 DIXON Rl1th Aldredge-daughter of 1 V Dixon ex 18 DURHAN J Jn1es Frank-middot~on of A E Durhan exOS EAST Sarah Louislt---fiaughter of Mrs C M East (Mona A Corbin I ) ECKERT Roberta Ca thrYl-ciaughter of Robert E Eckert 27 AM30 EDWARDS Margaret-daughter of Robert Edwards 14 MD17 and Kathleen
StIllwell Edwards 13 ELSNER Nf HY Allllette-dtughter of Edward P Elsner LLB12 and J~middotflyrne
McDon a ld Elsner ex 07 FELKINS Rllth ]oanamiddot- dallgbter of Frank Felkins 2S fiI 29 F ISHER Bob Kermit~on of ilert C Fisher ex16 FORO Annette---ltlaughter of George W Ford 14 Fox VonTI v Donald Thompson- son of Paul Foxworthy ex 17 FRANK Robert Edwanl- son of Kalherin Frank Everman PG34 FEEO J ames Allyn- on of James C Freed 19 MD2 1 and Ruby Kauff
man Freed ex ] S GALLOWAY Betty Rose-daughter of VaYlle C Galloway ex22 and Golda
Vatson Ga ll oway cx21 GARNER Willilttm P erry-son of I-foward Garner ]8 1ID20 GENTRY Famie Ellendell-ltlaughter of James W Gentry ex I Z GILL Ph ylli s Loraine-daughter of B p Gill 16 MD18 and Acyon (anmiddot
or Gill 13 GJILESPIEmiddot Jane-ltlaughte r oi B V Gillespie Jr 20 GlENN Alfred Hill- son of E R Glenn 13 and Ma r y Easley Glenn 13 Goss David Elmer- son of Elmer D Goss 12 a nd Ella Os borne Goss 13 GRFENOUGlJ Charl es Kimball-son of yaHer S Greenough 10 ano Kathmiddot
erine C roan GreenoJgh II GRIMES Charles Gaither-son of lr vi n L Grim es 0 1 HA DICH Mary Alice--daughter of Carl Habich 09 HACKER Anna Jane--daugh ter of 1VIrs Lillian Stewart Hacker ex 18 HANGER J oseph-son of E 0 Hanger PC23 fT ARLII John ~Iarshall-sol of Denver C H arlan 09 HASEMAN lrances Charlottc-daughter of John D Hasemln 05 A MOi HASLER Norman Blaine- son of E A Hasl er 36 HTFIELD John Robert- son of B F Hatfield MD 16 HAWKINS Norma lrene---daughter of LeJand Hawkins ex25 HENDRICKS Jane Ann - daughter of Mrs Harold D Hendricks (Jeannette
A Boshler 19) HIATT William Edgar-son of Edgar Raymond Hiatt 14 MD16 HICKAM Elliott-son of Vi II is Hickam LLB18 aod M ary Elliott Hi ckam
18 HINES Hubert Mark-son of Archie Hines MD12 HINDS Donavon Martin-son of Freeman H Hinds ex 19 and iIargaret
~(artin Hinds ex22 HOLM Claude DuVall-so n of Claude D Holmes 08 AMW HOOKE Chloe--sun uf S W Hooke MD09 HOUGHTON John Woodburn-son of Howard B Hought on 1 i aDd llary
Woodburn Houghton ex18 HOJJSE Betty Van-ltlaughter of Russell Hous e ex16 HUCKLEBERRY Don-son of Roy Hucklcbcmiddotrry LLB14 HULETT Robert Leo-son of Mrs E C Hulett (Marguerite Kn otts 17) HUMPHREYS H arrie t Jean---daughter of iltIrs Ethel Humphreys ]2 HUMRICHOOSER Harr y ~iJle(-son oi H e nry L Humric holl se r ex 18 and
Jea nnette Nliller Humrichouser 18 HURLEY Berryma n Shafer-son of Be rryma n Hurley ex 03 HYDE Mary Ann-daughter of Karl C H yde 15 HYNDMAN Dalip Eugen son of R y H y ndmon PG33 JOH NSON Frances Carolyn- daughter of Edward Byron J ohn son exZO JOHNSON Robert Leroy-son of E N Johnson 09 JUDD Vara-daughter of F H Judd ex12 KHAN Frandlyn Burtonmiddot- son of H ar ry L Kahan 17 MD I9 KAHN Alcander Jerome-son of Ralph H Kahn ex I S
(COHtl l11tcd on page 29)
The November 1938 8
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
The University 111 October cA Review of the Months Academic Life Campus Affairs
Autumn Leaves - and 1 U News in Brief
T H E Halloween month found the University campus hitting its usual stride of work and study
play and progress Now that the rush of registration and the start of another academic calendar are all past the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropr iate orshyganization niches and the library rules and regulashytions mastered the life undergraduate buckles dOm in real earnest
Beneath the campus trees painted now by autumn with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental rug hurry the Universitys six thousand students each intent on the problems of hi s day and collectively inshytent on education-and its sidelines Gray-clad R O T C cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thursshyday afternoon review piles of books tilt crazily on research tables in the library stacks resolute students jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street rooming houses and anyone seen without a leathershycovered notebook under his arm must be on his way to a dance
Assembly Hall Is Razed
It being nothing in hi s young life the casual freshshyman alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall deshymolition as though it were a usual thing But many an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark the passing of a campus landmark built in 1896 as the mens gym T hirteen Commencements have come and gone in the old rambling frame structure and it was there that President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903 Six yea rs later a swimming pool was added to the building but since then a stage has covered the spot Campus legend has it that the stage as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe and the old audi- torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner De Volfe Hopper and Forbes Robinson The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks
But enough of backward-looking Other October campus highlights included the state library convenshytion and its attendant publishers displays in the latshyticed booths set up in Alumni Hall the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana sect ion of the American
Chemical Society and the th ree-clay undergraduate banking short course sponsored by the University the Indiana Bankers Association and the Indiana Departshyment of Financial Institutions At the chemistry meetshying Dr H T Briscoe new head of the LV chemistry department spoke on the place of that science in the University curriculum Professor F C Mathers adshydressed the group on Recent Studies in Electroshyplating
Men at Work in Forest Primeval
Back to his old haunts comes Robert Simpson ex32 to do what he can with the campus trees Simpson now a tree surgeon asserts that it is still possible to save some of the ancient beeches and oaks many of them two and a half centuries old His technique is to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree needing attention pull open the hatch take out his tools and he and his gang go to work
So as the trees are patched and Assembly Hall comes down the new Union Building lounge goes up Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the month work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new lounge for men Present plans call for wood panelling inside and regular he-man furniture This room ill be for men only and co-eds will be admitted to the present lounge
Silas the Chore Boy was the opening Univershysity Theater performance of the season and campus first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi lla in
Assembly Hall is coming down
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
cheer the hero and sigh with the disshytressed heroine No sooner did the curtain fall on the last performance than the stage craft crew resumed its pounding and painting in Mitchell Hall to fashion sets for the next proshyduction the Broadway hit Stage Door
Salesman Go Way From My Door
October is also the month of the undergraduate salesmen Blue Key members pace determinedly from orshyganization house to house urging members to buy their athletic ticket yearbooks neophytes on the Arbutus staff open their sales campaign Unishyversity Theater ticket hawkers collar their friends on the campus paths and Music Series salesmen begin the drive for paid attendance
And so the month goes Dr Rayshymond Pearl biologist of J olms Hopshykins University concludes his lecture series on Man the Animal business school seniors apply for the $250 loan scholarship awarded annually by the American Bankers Association over at Forest Hall some student equestrishyenne hangs a Horse for Sale sign f rom her dormitory window the Indishyana School of Religion starts a camshypaign to obtain funds for a building student politicians invite representashytives of both major parties to speak at campus gatherings more russet leaves float down to the campus paths and a returning senior who had been out of school for six years gets lost in the maze of new structures
-Y-
Bankers Conference
Some 250 bank officers junior exshyeClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier banks were on the campus for the three-day bankers conference Octoshyber 24-26 Oscar Cravens prep88 officially opened the short courses by introducing James A Stuart OJ manshyaging editor of the Indianapolis Star who presided at the fi rst two sessions
After an address of welcome by President Herman B Wells and reshysponses by Ross H Wallace director of the Indiana Department of Finanshycial Institutions and Robert H Myers bankers association president the banker-students settled down to serishyous classroom work with six classes per day on the schedule Outstanding authorities in banking lectured to the classes and at nights there were dinshyners and addresses in the Union Buildshymg
Dr Harold Stonier executive manshyager of the American Bankers Assoshyciation and for ten years its national
]0
educational director spoke at the dinshyner session on October 24 on the subshyject Why Educate
The Man for the Job
Alumni are eligible to use the servshyices of the Personnel and Placement Bureau of the University it was anshynounced by C W Barker acting dean of the School of Business Adminisshytration Dean Barker pointed out that between one and two hundred alumni are registered at various times and the bureau will be glad to refer calls f rom employers to the various alumni who are qualified for the positions open
Interested alumni should write to the bureau for a personal data sheet to list their qualifications and experishyence for the information of employers who call for applicants for positions Last year-the third for the bureaushy853 per cent of the business seniors were placed
School of Law
In his autumn report to the Law School Committee of the Board of Trustees Dean Bernard C Gavit reshyvealed that the present first-year enshyrollment is fifty-one and a total of 141 are enrolled in the School A loss in regular enrollment of twenty-two students is accounted for by the small third-year class (first to enter under the three-year requirement plan) and the fact that last June the faculty exshycluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the grounds of scholastic deficiency
New to the Law School this year is the grading system of pass with disshytinction pass and fail and being worked out is the new plan of compreshyhensive examinations The rule against extra-curricular activities for budding lawyers has met with whole-hearted cooperation on the part of the student body the report states
This year every six freshmen law students have a faculty sponsor and are welcome as are other students in the school to consult with faculty members during regular office hours In the air are plans for the installation of the honor system in the Law School
School of Medicine
The sophomore class is a roo per cent Indiana University affair this fall according to Mark P Helm 94 registrar who says that the class is composed entirely a f students proshymoted from Bloomington However that hasnt simplified his problem of
what to do with the Warrens There are three of them C B and W B who are brothers from Marshall and J c of Winchester no relation to the other two But to make matters more complex all are 37
Another honor came to the School of Medicine recelltly when Karl R Ruddell MDI 1 was elected president of the Indiana State Medical Assoshyciation He is a widely known Indianshyapolis physician and succeeds Dr Herman Baker of Evansville
School of Dentistry
Several members of the faculty preshysented lectures or clinics at the annual meeting of the American Dental Assoshyciation held in St Louis during the week of October 24
Other activities of the school inshycluded a symposium on the causes of dental decay by Drs G T Gregory and D A Boyd before the Jay County Dental Society on October 7 and Actshying Dean G D Timons read a paper Dental Medicine before the Cincinshynati Dental Society at its regular monthly meeting for October
Indianapolis Extension
Of the 2287 persons enrolled at the LU Extension Center in Indianapolis over Jooo were not taking work there last year according to a report by Mary Orvis AM18 executive secreshytary She reports that more than a third of the persons enrolled in credit courses are not working for credit and about 600 persons are enrolled in non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology interior decorashytion representative thinkers painting demonstration and a history series on Our Historians Look at Europe 10shyday
Tribute
Over the airlanes recently went a tribute to the late Blythe Q Hendshyricks former librarian of the School of Medicine at Indianapolis Speaking f rom a sports broadcast Norman Perry Jr NIRE announcer reshyviewed the career of Mr Hendricks first man to broadcast a baseball game from Indianapolis and the first anshynouncer to send news of the state basketball tournament over the air A lawyer by profession and secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety at the time of his death late in August Hendricks had a wide circle of friends among University and newspaper folks He was deeply and sincerely interested in all things Hoosier the I ndmiddotianapolis Timiddot1Ites comshymented editorially
The November 1938
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late
Charles Kettleborough 07 AM08 PhD16
o HONOR the memory of the late Dr CharlesT Kettleborough for many years head of the states legislative reference bureau a memorial collection of books is being placed in the Indiana State Library Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana star student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute to his memory
In keeping with the life work of Dr Kettleborough books on the subjects of government and public adshyministration will be purchased for the special collecshytion Christopher B Coleman director of the historishycal bureau of the state department of education has announced that the volumes will be marked by a meshymorial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley
Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime to his commonwealth as did Dr Charles Kettleshyborough reads the announcement of the memorial committee Beyond the story of his career in the legisshylative reference bureau lies the story of Dr Kettleshyborough s undergraduate life on the Bloomington camshypus agd beyond that of his boyhood in the small Hoosier town of Topeka
I knew him from childhood writes A J Yoder ex95 clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka we were pals for many years during his boyhood and young manhood years in Topeka He was an incomshyparable companion to whose untimely death [Dr Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I shall never become entirely reconciled
iVe hiked many and many a mile together Mr Yoder continues taught school in the same townshyship worked summers together as partners on the railshyroad as section hands I taught him to smoke a pipe I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he was after smoking that first pipeful and how he lay across my bed the palest live white man I ever saw
And now my oid pal is gone He lies in a treeless flowerless cheerless cemetery in the family lot of the Bylers who took him to raise when he was a homeless waif English born four years old had it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Mennonite family consisting of the parents and four daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie
the same love they would have gi ven a natural son and brother his career would have been a very differshyent one Were it otherwise you would not now be honoring his memory
In the minds of many a University official state legislator and other figures in public life linger memshyories of Dr Kettleborough and his office in the Stateshyhouse To him there came hundreds of citizens seekshying answers to questions of public administration His great talent his painstaking thoroughness and his frank and open approach made his life a symbol of service to his fellow man The fruits of his labors are written on the statute books (If the state and the kindshyliness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who knew him
His work in the legislative reference bureau was outstanding according to L A Pittenger 07 AM08 president of Ball State Teachers Colllege and a classmate in the University of Dr Kettleborough Always quiet composed and thoughtful he rendered a very effective service to all legislators and through them to the State of Indiana
Dr Kettleborough never married His Ii fe centered around his work for others Except for vacation trips to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of mounshytain-climbing and visits to the state parks and his Unishyversity Dr Kettleboroughs orbit was his Indianapolis hotel residence the Statehouse and the state library
I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be located in the Indiana State Library in which much of his interest centered during his mature life It is also fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious as was the career of this most useful of citizens
Many contributions have been received at Dr Coleshymans office in the State Library where alumni may obshytain information on the memorial It is expected that a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established The memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr Kettleborough among them Thomas A Hendricks Joe Rand Beckett Joseph A Andrew Walter S Greenshyough 10 Albert Stump 12 Leo M Rappaport Edward D Farmer eX99 Earl Crawford Mrs James L Murray DeWitt S Morgan Herbert P Kenney and Christopher B Coleman
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
23
AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
This is Rosebud Agency its children and their homes and its primary schoolroom
I Teach Indian Children by MARGARET WINSLOvV )2
[Miss Winslows address Rosebud Agency South Dawta turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files to make us decide th ere must be a storv there There Was This is it-EnrToRs NOTE]
My HEART skipped a beat when I received a telegram last January noti fying me to leave my
home near Salem Ind and report for duty at Rosebud Agency South Dakota as soon as possible That was an unheard-of country all anyone seemed to know was the fact tha t it as out west somewhere near the big round-ups and dust regions Maps didn t help much except to show a few little towns the Indian reservashytions and a big open space labeled The Badlands
I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska hich as thirty-si x miles from the Agency here I was to be met by- 1 didnt know who I had visions of being welcomed in the middle of the night by Big Chief So-and-So riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or at least a Model T because the roads couldn t be very good and there was snow on the ground To my surshy
prise (and relief ) the principal of edushycation and his wi fe were there took me with them to the Agency ane gave me a bed for the rest of the night
I was awakened by church bells that beshying Sunciay mornshying and my first imshypression of Rosebud was a little town of snow-topped houses
Margaret Winslow protected on all sides
by big hills a big country ith nothing but hills and canyons to break the sameness of the landscape Even the trees were hidden dOwn in the deep canyons Quite different from our Indiana hill s and trees but interestshying in its vastness beautiful especially in the spring when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild roses and cacti
Quarters for employes are quite comfortable I live in a club where each two people have a furnished suite of two rooms and bath Rosebud has all the modern conshyveniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is crowded into two general stores Lights water and sewage systems are all government owned and mainshytained A good-s ized dam has made a little lake which is grand for skating in winter or swimming boating and fi shing in summer
Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated enough so that we have to do our own entertaining A tennis club keeps up the courts a golf club maintains a course near hear and some o f the men have organized a gun club Good riding horses are close while pheasshyants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt
Unlike public school teachers the Indian service teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine months in the class room and the other three doing some kind of community work I was detailed to supervise 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Roseshybud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the Sioux Fair in the fall
Schools are of two types The boarding school for the whole reservation and the community day schools Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government Children are sent to boarding school after they finish the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend a day school Here the pupils are furni shed everything from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)
]2 Th e November 19 38
For Alumnae Only Stars R eturn Is Thrill-of the-Month Co-Eds Alumnae
Gain Recognition On and Off Campus
by HELEN WEATHERVAX 39
Managing Editor The Indiana Daily Student
MAR]OHIE V EA VERS COMING Shes goshyin g to eat and sleep in the same house with us
The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student office and fingers trembling with excitement proceeded to type her big story Thus was heralded the early October arrival of Marjorie eaver ex 36 Indiana Universitys contribution to Hollywood
E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior year because a sorori ty sister Rubynelle Parks eX36 teased her into it Marj orie victorious was awarded a trip to New York There she took dancing lessons did professional modeling anel posed for ads Movie offers followed and she signed a contract with arner Brothshyers followed six months later by one with Twentieth Century-Fox
A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers flooded the Kappa house during Nlarj ories two-day campus visit as she entertained with countless stories o f Hollywood and movie stars People in Hollywood all have fun and it is a grand place to make money in a hurry she said For would-be movie actresses she adshyvised getting a ll the training possible with Prof Lee Norvelle of the University division of speech to whom she attributes her success
Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with puffed sleeves and ermine trimming Marjorie attended a number of fraternity dances Marveling at the new buildings constructed since I936 she confessed that she had thought there was a depression on until she saw how beautiful the campus has become
Co-Eds A1ound the Campus
Activ ities for the Univ ers itys 183I co-eds are reach- ~
ing their usual rushing tempo Co-eds thus far have proved themselves proficient in a number of fields Ten women contributed to the first issue of the Folio Unishyversity quarterly for writers eighteen were se lected as new members of Taps junior dramatic organization in which no men IVon membership this year 350 were inducted into the Y C A ninety-five were selected for the womens chorus and fifty-five enrolled in the 1 U co-ed banel believed to be the onl y university womens band in the countr
Although University co-eels are devoting time to nushymerous ext ra-curricular activities they are not deficient in scholarship statistics for last semester show Delta Zeta sorority led the li st with Pi Beta Phi Phi Omega Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in close competition Co-ed organizations hold the first fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups with unorgan ized women averaging slightly hi gher than those organized
Alumnae in the Big Red Book
1 U alumnae also are doing themselves proud with a number listed in the recent edition of Whos Who in America Li sted are Professor Lillian Gay Berry 99 AMoS of the University Latin departshyment Mrs Anna L ane Lin gelbach 95 ANI96 proshyfessor of history at Temple University Carrie E mma Scott 98 Indianapolis librarian Mrs Alta Brunt Sembower O I Bloomington Gertrude Shields 14 Indianapolis Mrs Emma Bain SViggett 89 secretary of the National Council of Vomen and Mrs Bertha Knight Landes 9I former mayor of Seattle Mrs Landes recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia ha s promised to write on An 1 U Alumna in Politi cs or a related top ic for an early issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE
Sheila Jane Crooke ex38 is anshyother former student who has made good Now a member of the Prairie FarmershyWLS staff in Chishycago Miss Crooke has contributed writshying to many publicashytions including The Far11t Journal McshyCall s jl1agazinc N e1i York Times Chicago Tribune and a number of Marjorie Weaver ex36 trade publications People all have fun
INDIANA ALUlINI ~IAGAZI~E 13
Two years ago she won a national conshytest with a poem commemorating the fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation to the United States of the Statue of Liberty by France and was awarded fifty dollars and a trip to New York The poem was published in a small volume of the fifty best verses subshymitted in the contest one book went to the White House another to the Presishydent of France
Now that the shouting and the tushymult of Rush Week is only a breathshyless memory of the opening days of school (which somehow seem already far off) life in the sorority houses on the campus at 1 U is running as smoothly as is its usual wont A comshyplete list of the present semesters orshyganization pledges follows
ALPHA CHI OMEGA Elva Baughn Greenville Ohio Sally Bollenbacher Washshyington Jesse Boswell Anderson Barbara Drummond Indianapolis Mary Lou Fershyguson Seymour Marilyn Fleming South Bend Jane Gaff South Bend Rosalie Holshyman Indianapolis Rosemary Miner Penshydleton Phyllis Morris Jeffersonville Jean Parent Union City Virginia Stevens South Bend Pauline Taylor Columbus
ALPHA DELTA PI Alice Grandstaff North Manchester Marilyn Rader Chesshyterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling Indianapshy
olis Betty Martin South Whitley Mary Jo Tennell Bloomington Mary Jo Wright Odon Lenora Wilkinson Gary Harriett Hildebrand Washington D C
ALPHA OMICRON PI Mary Jane Armstrong Bedford Jeanice Bartling Fort Wayne Suzzanna Fogg Greensburg Elloshygene Griffith Scottsburg Ellen June Kenshynedy Dunkirk Martha McIntosh Worthshyington Jane Pursley Newburgh Louise Roudebush Winamac Doris Rose Crown Point Rosemary Ruffing Delphi Margaret Thomas Corydon Martha Tierman Richshymond Carol Karr Jeffersonville Dona Surr Valparaiso Norma McClintock Inshydianapolis Delores Small Hobart Betty Calpha Chicago Ill Barbara Spencer Inshydianapolis Louise Vittiton Owensboro Ky Wanda Pull ian Indianapolis Martha Ellen Wiesman Kokomo Maxine Morris Elkhart Mary Elizabeth McIlveen Bloomshyington Reba Pendry Bloorrungton Betty Jane Greene Gary
CHI OMEGA Mary Benninghoff Fort Wayne Clara Bente Fort Wayne Dolores Cleaver Fort Wayne Marjorie Cole West Lafayette Mary Elizabeth Hoover Middleshybury Martha Heightchew Monticello Doshylores Miller Terre Haute Elizabeth Neff Fort Wayne Mary Snapp Whiting Nance Walker Chicago Ill Betty Jane Rowe Milshywaukee Wis Catherine Marnan Whiting
DELTA GAMMA Dorothy Burchfield Evansville Ruth Colle Anderson Cathshyerine Durham Indianapolis Murene Fieshygenschuh Calumet City III Virginia Flory Indianapolis Annette Ford South Bend
Jerry Gates Indianapolis Janette Graham Indianapolis Ann Henderson Indianapolis Jean Humphreys Evansville Carolyn Kimshyball Mt Vernon Irene Krantz Logansport Mary Jane Lincoln Columbus Margaret Ann Morrison Kokomo Patt Nichols Spencer Jane Rinehart Louisville Ky Margaret Ann Roethke Milwaukee Wis Margaret Ann Shaul Terre Haute Mary Beth Steinmetz Indianapolis Barbara Wilshyliams Beaumont Texas Alyce Wright Meshytuchen N J Barbara Zeigler Michigan City Betty Fraser Bloomington Mary Susan Schmalz Bloomington
DELTA DELTA DELTA Mary Carshyson Lafayette Mellie Cox Sullivan Nancy Ellis Shelbyville Dona Jean Gifford Chishycago Ill Margaret Grundy South Bend Fern Hart Chicago Ill Naomi Kixmiller Vincennes Jane Livengood South Bend Marj orie Mellon Springfield Ohio Betty Miller Manilla Suzanne Novre Frankfort Jean Redman Garrett Mary Louise Sanshyders Lafayette Patricia Ziegler Hamshymond Joan Unbenhour Garrett Jean Vitshytitow Rockport Elizabeth Whisman Shelshybyville Elinese Burns Bloomington
DELTA ZETA Jean McGrew Newshycastle Ruth McCracklin Sullivan Jane Hudson Detroit Alice Crosman Chestershyton Josephine DeFrank Sullivan Margashyret Hill Marion Vivian Johnson Gary Irene May Corydon
KAPPA ALPHA THETA Brownie Baker Bluffton Joan Barr Rochester Virshyginia Berkholder Indianapolis Nancy Bidshy
(CoH timed on page 30)
Meeting Called to Order cAlumni Club News from Washington Chicago and Indiana Cities
Washington D C
U NIVERSITY alumni living in and near the Capital City are invited to
a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday night November 18 The Congresshysional Country Club has been rented for the party and dance this year and all alumni their families and their friends are cordially invited accordshying to the announcement of the Midshywest Con ference alumni organization Attendance is limited to 600 and resershyvations may be made by telephoning Woodley 6416 in Washington
Chicago
The Indiana University Alumni Club of Chicago will have as its guests campus students making the annual inshydustrial tour to the Windy City Dale Cox 24 public relations director of the International Harvester Company will be the main speaker at a dinner on November 4 Arrangements were made by James C Kiper 32 president of the Chicago group
The Bloomington students will also be guests of the Chicago Board of Trade at a dinner and will visit the National Broadcasting Company Car-
Alumni Club Schedule Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday
noon Columbia Club President ALLEN WARNE 25 6270 Park Avenue
Chicago-Tuesday noons Harding Restaurant Fair Store cor Dearshyborn and Adams
President JAMES C KIPER 32 35 E Wacker Drive Room 776
South Bend-Every Monday noon Y M C A
President CHARLES H~HN LLB32 1237 Longfellow
Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each month 6 p m Deming Hotel
President NORMAN BIVIN ex27 1640 Second A venue
negie-I11inois Steel Company Fruit Auction Sales and other industries while on the annual pilgrimage for business school students
Indianapolis
The annual luncheon of 1 U alumni in connection with the Indiana State
Teachers convention was held on Ocshytober 28 in the Chateau Room of the Claypool Hotel President Herman B Tells presided and speakers included President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and Dean H L Smith of the School of Education A musical proshygram was presented by Prof Villiam A Ross new member of the School of Music faculty Alumni headquarters were maintained at the hotel during the convention
The Indiana-Il1inois football game was discussed at the October 10 meetshying of the Indiana University Club of Indianapolis (men) A luncheon was held in the Columbia Club and Gerald Redding 26 led the discussion
Terre Haute
Washington Impressions was the title of a talk given before Terre Haute alumni by E Ross Bartley ex 14 on October 4 Twenty alumni were presshyent at the dinner held in the Elks Club Norman Bivin ex27 presided and plans were made for a stag party on October 20 at the Mayflower Room of the Terre Haute Ho-use A Thanksshygiving dance was also discussed
The November 1938 14
Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W T Morgans Last Volume on British
History and John Wilcox 11 on Moliere
The Relation of koliere 10 Restoration Comedy By John Wilcox 1 I Associa te Professor of English Wayne University ( New York Columbia Univershysity Press London Oxford University Press etc 1938 Pp ix 240 Appendices bibliography and index $3 )
The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book E mshybarking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study of the literary influence of an author upon a whole school of writers in another country Dr vVilcox states his determination to maintain a sound and consistent judgment in a field where the evidence had already proshyduced a large body of contradictory conclusions
In order to do this he offers first a chapter on The Background and second one on The Method with the following heads literary commonplace commonshyplace of the theater social commonplace commonplace of life identifying peculiarities literary influence These principles are timely and seem to be soundly apshyplied in determining the question of influence
He feels that earlier students of this question have too much adopted extreme positions either exaggeratshying the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy or conceding entirely too little influence
He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all alleged parallels in Restoration comedy and has in sevshyeral cases reached a different conclusion from those of his predecessors for example he denies influence of Moliere upon George Etherege cited as an outstanding imitator by Wurzback Miles and others and finds little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne He maintains moreshyover that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson Fletcher and Shirley
Dr Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in such involved studies where they are most needed-of thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Resshytoration comedies) which have some connection with Moliere (page 179)
The writers who were really important in bringing Moliere to England were Dryden Shadwell Wychershyley and Ravenscroft Rarely would Dr vVilcox conshycede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
dramatist were acquired it was mainly his plots and comic devices Hence his conclusion that the influellce of Moliere was only one element in the development of Restoration comedy
It is possible that Dr Wilcox underestimates the conshytribution of a pioneer in this study Dr Dudley Miles whose thesis in this same series was accepted by a Coshylumbia University jury in 1910 Of course we expect critical method in estimating literary influence to make great strides in twenty-eight years Dr vVilcox has conshysidered it necessary as we have seen to devote an imshyportant chapter to a new critica l method Dr Miles can hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere in accordance with the conventions of his time
We hope that this fine book of Dr Wilcox will prove impregnable and that another Columbia jury will not reverse the verdict in 1966 BERT E YOUNG
Bloomington + + +
A Blbliography of British History (I700-I7I5) with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne Volshyume II 1708-17 I5 By WILLIAM T MORGAN Proshyfessor of European History Indiana University (Bloomington Ind Indiana University Studies Nos 114-Il8 December 1936 March June Sepshytember December 1937 actually published in Deshycember 1937 Pp vi 684 $600)
This volume is the second of Professor William T Morgans four-volume bibliography of the reign of Queen Anne It deals with the last years of the reign (1708-1714) and in order to cover the aftermath of the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715 it also includes materials published in 1716 As described in the review of the first volume (see Indiana University Alumni Quarterly XXII NO 3 pp 347-348) the orshy
ganization is chronological Each chapter which lists pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year is prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few words about the controversies that provoked the warshyfare of pamphlets and sermons Some of the entries are annotated
This period was indeed the heyday of the controshyversial pamphleteer The climax of the war and the question of the peace the fierce conflict of Whigs and Tories the feuds of factions the bitter religious disshyputes and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)
15
Fightin Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries But Views November
Schedule With Undamaged Morale
by GEORGE L GARDNER 34
Assistant to Director of Athletics
[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game see the story Alumni Return for Homecoming starting on page 5]
S Indiana Universitys football team headed into n the second half of its difficult schedule last weekshyend against Visconsin prospects were some brighter than the results of the first half o f the season show on the record
The Hoosier squad which is now made up of fortyshysix varsity candidates has been beset by ill fortune ever since the opening game of the season against Ohio State
The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fundamentally the squad was a good football team but one vvhich would need the valuable experience to be gained only in actual competition before it could be counted upon as a reliable machine In this regard there has been some noticeable improvement but on the other hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride since that first game
The inexperience of the various sophomores used has not been the entire reason that the team has faltered even though this factor is not to be overlooked Injuries to key men or players expected to carry a greater part of the burden this fall has caused an almost constant revision of the offensive plans and there has been a reshysultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the Indiana attack
A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game
A greater part of the li st of injured has not been made public The fact is that most of the players who have been hurt are those who received a little more atshytention during the pre-season practice than those who have been carrying the burden Consequently there has been a great deal of work to be done over and naturally the response has not been as spontaneous as could be expected from a more experienced group of players
Squad Dogged by Injuries
In the opening game against Ohio State two fine sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and have been unable to play since They are Joe Tofil a fullback and Cobb Lewis a halfback Undoubtedly the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of the planned attack for the season Also in this game Russell Sloss a center was injured and was unable to play in the Illinois game
In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher a sophomore guard received a broken collarbone and is out for the season Captain Paul Graham received a severely wrenched knee Frank Petrick regular right end su fshyfered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and Kansas State games John Widaman end Joe Nicholshyson Harold Hursh and Eddie Herbert all sophomore backs came out of the contest with bad charley horses As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk another end was unable to play at Illinois but despite his physical handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick owing to lack of substitutes at thi s position William Smith who was regular left guard at the start of the season has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game owing to a bruised hip Vincent Oliver halfshyback who has been shifted to fullback has been handishycapped by a sprained wrist while Archie Harris giant sophomore negro end was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class Harold Zimmer another sophomore back has a sprained ankle
Despite this list of casualties from which at one time twelve players were out of service the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win This in spite of the treshymendous amount of work which has had to be done to
16 The November 19 3 8
The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I U around left end in the Nebraska game
take up the slack and the apparent futility of the attack Yhich accounted for on ly one touchdown in the first four games
Of errors of which there have been many there is little to be sa id except that the boys who committed these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every day to make up for the mishaps
Ohio State 6 Indiana 0
In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack revealed so far thi s season The Hoosiers appeared se t for an early arrival and a fine season following this conshytest which was practically all Indiana despite the fact that Ohio State won the game 6-0 Indiana completely dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty seconds of the ball game and it was during this time that Ohio State fashioned its only sustained drive of the afternoon marching seventy yards for the touchshydown
In the first quarter of the game Ohio State was unshyable to gain but Indiana taking a punt on its own twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana forty-three F ollowi ng several punt exchanges Hursh tried a long pass to Petrick but it was intercepted by Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohios twenty-eight
Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter ended and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the Inshydiana twenty-two-yard line Neither side was able to gain consistently although Indiana retained possession of the ball most of the time Langhurst took Nicholshysons punt on Ohios sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight for its first trip into Hoosier territory Indiana made three first downs in a row as the half ended
In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated the play Ohio State had possession of the ball only three times during which it attempted only five plays
INDIANA ALUMNI llAGAZINE
T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the Indiana thirty-six Nicholson made a first down on the Indiana forty-six Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down on the Ohio forty-two Tofil and Nicholson teamed in carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five where Indiana was penalized for offside Nicholsons pass to Clasen was knocked down on the five-yard line Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own thirty-one Tofils bucking and Nicholsons passing took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four During this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on the Ohio State ten but the Hoosiers were penalized for holding and the play nullified Ohio Sta te steadied and Indiana was forced to punt Ohio State returned the punt and Olivers long pass was intercepted by Kabealo on Ohios fourteen Kabealo returning to the Indiana forty-nine where he was caught by Harri s
Ohio State then started its march From hi s on thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the Sta tue of Liberty play Scott picked up seven yards and then took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one Sexton passed to tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven Sexton then passed to Scott for the touchdown
Indiana stormed back with a rush tossing passes frantically but was unable to fashion a consistent drive On a combination of passes and running plays the Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one but Indiana
f was penalized fifteen yards for holding The lastshyminute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection on the Ohio fifteen to end Indianas last scoring threat
Illinois 12 Indiana 2
Against Illinois the Hoosiers received no better breaks than they did against the Buckeyes There Inshydianas fumbling and errors counted heavily against the Hoosiers Following a short kickoff received by Illinois Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior punting displayed by Illinois The first bad break came
17
when Clasens punt was blocked and recovered by Ilshylinois on the Indiana thirtyshynine The Illini advanced to the Indiana twenty-four but Indiana steadied and frusshytrated an Illinois passing ofshyfensive Illinois threatened again driving to the Indiana thirty before Naddeo intershycepted Wardleys pass on the Indiana twenty-four Clasen quick-kicked for Indiana and Illinois was penalized for holding Graham intercepted
I U Football Schedule-1938 o-OHIO STATE 6 2-ILLINOIS 12 o-NEBRASKA o 6-KANSAS STATE 13
Oct 29-WISCONSIN at Madison Nov 5-BOSTON at Boston NOV12-IOWA at Bloomington
(DadsDay) NOVI9--PURDUE at Lafayette
Reserved Seats Iowa Game $250 General Admission 125
The two teams see-sawed back and forth on the field as the half ended
To start the second half Clasen kicked from the Indishyana sixteen to Elting who returned to the Indiana forty-two Illinois advanced the ball tothe Indiana twentyshyeight Wehrli shagged a pass and ran the ball to the Indishyana thirteen then plunged to the four-yard line From there Brewer plunged over for the touchdown
Petersons pass running to the Illinois forty-two Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen Line plays failing Nicholson passed to Widaman This was the disputed play of the game The ball bounced out of Widamans hands and apparently was touched by an Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Illinois two-yard line The officials after some discusshysion ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the ball and it was Illinois ball on their own eighteen
On the next play the Illinois pass from center was wide and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety
Following the kickoff Indiana started on another drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven beshyfore Nicholsons pass was intercepted on the Illinois nineteen Following a punt exchange Indiana started clown the field again from its own twenty-seven adshyvancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four Hursh passed to Rucinski who dropped the ball on the Illinois four-yard line Hursh passed to Widaman on Illinois twenty-three and his next toss was intercepted by Wehrli who returned to the Illinois thirty-two Folshylowing another punt exchange Indiana once more started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)
News Notes of Varsity Sports
Harriers Extend Winning Streak
BACK at the cross-country helm after a two-year absence Sid Robshy
inson PG30 piloted the Hoosier marshyathoners to their thirteenth and fourshyteenth consecutive dual meet victories over Purdue and Butler on October 12 and 19 respectively Both meets were won by identical scores 19-36
Not since Michigan State did the trick in 1934 have the Hoosier crossshycountrymen lost a dual meet
Mel Trutt veteran senior letterman took first place honors in each dual to pace Indianas continued victory march on the hill-and-dale front The triumph over Butler was the sixth in a row The record books do not go back far enough to show a reversal at the hands of the Purdue aggregation
Smith to Get Thorough Try
Bill Smith who pitched the Indiana baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten championship this spring is back on the
by WILLIAM A BUCHANAN 39
campus to complete work for his deshygree Smith was given a tryout this summer with the Jersey City club in the International League
Although he was used mostly in reshylief roles Smith impressed Jersey ofshyficials favorably and will be promoted to a starting role next summer The Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by the New York Giants
Anothn Big Leaguer
Merrill May eX32 recently was picked up in the major league draft by the Philadelphia Phillies Having been an important cog in the Newark Intershynational League clubs team for the past few years the ex-Crimson third baseshyman comes highly recommended to the Phillies
May is the first Indiana man to join baseballs big show since Vernon Wilshyshire 36 went lip with the Philadelshyphia Athletics a few years back
Ex-I U Stars Shme in Pro League
Indiana Universitys contributions to the National Professional Football League lave played an outstanding role in recent developments in the pJayshyfor-pay ranks
Corby Davis all-American fullback of the 1937 Crimson eleven has been a potent factor in the sudden reversal of form shown by the Cleveland Rams Davis accounted for one touchdown on October 9 when the Rams surprised all the customers by turning back the preshyviously unbeaten Chicago Bears [7-7
Headlines accompanied the recent sale of Frank Filchock ex38 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington Redskins It was a definite step toward the top for Filchock The Redskins were pro champs last fal1 while the Pirates spent their odd moments gropshying their way out of the leagues cellar The former Crimson passing ace was brought in to aid the ailing Sammy Baugh in the aerial department
Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 18
Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs Fishing and
Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders
Keith OHair ex29 (left wearing vest) friends and fish
WH EN the bare-faced postcarded statement Im the best duck hunter in Arkansas came to the
1LCAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C McMulshylen 04 Pine Bluff (Ark) physician it seemed too good to pass up
While a message was being sent to Dr McMullen asking for proof of his prowess there arrived by some strange quirk letters from three other alumni in widely separated parts of the country telling of their success in hunting and or fishing in their sections
Kenneth Lee Wagner ex36 of Corpus Christi Texas reported that he was enjoying the best hunting and fishing in the U S and this information was passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results noted below From iVoodburn Ore came Keith OHairs (exz9) word that tuna fi shing couldnt be beat out there and the inference that hunting vvasnt the whole story of sport At about the same time John A Elliott exI8 Kansas City (Kan) dentist reported on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake ~outhecaughtupthere
Dr McMullens letter of proof vas the longest and best documented He sent a can of photographs o f which one is reproduced on this page A condensation of his letter (also canned) follows
Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am tops the first flight man of Arkansas and at large the greatest the country affords the best duck hunter Now of course I wouldnt want to speak disparagingly of that Corpus Christi bird but confidentially there aint no ducks c1on there Really he just got thar notion one
day when the overflow flew down there and he got an idea that they ere indigenously present or something Now as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons when we have our limit of ducks When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug jam a duck or two on each point and shy that into the bayu The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin iVe crank him in until he shows a bit
above the water and then the boys with the 30-30s beshygin working on him Yes after we get the gar in I amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent Some of the pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot of and believe me brother that is a stunt Send these pictures back because they cost real money The phoshy
tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney
ducks he uses cost like thunder Incidentally if
1 U gets a game with L S U or Vandy or Alabama and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line Ill be
there if I have to miss a duck hunt
Mr OHair who is a funeral director in the Oregon
town kept both feet on the ground in relating his postshy
1 U sports career Tuna fi shing he writes is a new
sport off the coast of Oregon Our party consisted of nine and we went out in a forty-twoshyfoot boat We went straight west until we came to blue water and then stalied fishshying vVe estimated we were out about forty miles when the first fi sh was hooked and it was not long before the water seemed alive with jumpshying fi sh Our first Edwin C McMullen 04 (Contd 0 11 p 27) Absolutely the tops
INDIANA ALU~LI IAGAZI-IE 19
I Knew Him When bull bull bull cllumni News Notes by Classes
1880 SecretaYo MRS VVALLACpound PALMER j00 N Co llege Ave Bloomington
1HLIA l( T BLAI R BL fo rmer class sec retary died on Oc tobe r IS at hi s home in Bloomington Death was ca used by a hea rt attack Born in Bloomington of pioneer pa rents Mr B lair started in business as a shoe merchant la tel operated a ha rdshyware store was one 0 f the orga nizshyers 0 f the Bloom ington Cut Stone Company once served as county a ushyditor and member o f the c ity CO Ull shy
cil He is survived by two children Tames W Blai r 08 LLB09 and lvIary Blair exI7 a brother James N Blair a nd a s ister Mrs Villi a m H Ande rson (Ada L Blair ex84)
1883 Secretary J ULIETTE M XWELL
The Am bassador H otel Indianapo li s
Air ma il bring~ word as the ( AGAZI NE goes to press of th e death of REV R SCOTT STEPHENshySON in Los Angeles on October 17 A Presbyte rian mini ster he reshyce ived hi s theological training in the Chicago T heologica l Sem inary and served pastora tes in Madi son S D a nd in Bellefontaine O hio A fter ret irement in 1931 he wen t to Los ngeles to speJld h is time in readshying and writing A loyal a lumnus a lways proud o f my University he made a gi ft of $500 to Iv in 195 With the g ift he wrote My grat itude for all the University has done fo r me is considerable T he memory of those fine old days in the fin e old ha ll s is beautiful and touch ing
1889 Secretary COL T ] LOUDpoundN
420 N Park Bloomington
ANNA REINHARD LO UDEN wife of Col T J Loud en B loomington sec retary of the class passed away on August 2 I S he was the daughter of the late Judge Geo rge Reinhard cl ean of the law school a nd vi ceshypres iclen t 0 f the University a nd came to B loomi ngton af ter he r grad uation from Oxford (Ohio) College for Vome n She is surshyvi ved by her hu sband four chi ld ren a nd seven g ra ndc h ilcl en The passshying of lVIr s Louden is a rea l loss to the community the Bloo lJlillqton Telep h oll e commented
20
t _=a ~ ~
Among October visitors to the campus was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT 88 AM93 who visited the University library where is located the 5000shyvolume collection he and his wife (Emma Bain 89) donated to the Unishyversity last lear
Master of nine languages authority on comparative literature and expert in Latin American affairs Dr Swigshygett believes that the eighth PanshyAmerican conference in Lima Peru this December is of greatest sigshynificance to the United States In a recent interview he said that conflictshying philosophies of government may menace our traditional Pan-American policy
For the past fourteen years Dr and Mrs Swiggett have spent nearly half of each year traveling over the world by camel burro rickshaw boat auto or train-but they have yet to take their first ride in an airplane
1890 Sfcrefary MR S ELLA COll R SERVI CE
410 W Main St Greenfie ld
A testimonia l dinner was recently held in Lin co ln Neb for FRED D CORNELL ex Scotti sh Rite sec retar y there On October 20 lir Corne ll moved [0 Los A ngles Ca l
1892 Secretary PR OF CHARLES J SEMBOW ER
702 Ball entine Rd Bloomington
LI1AI(lES T KNIPP (AM96) is emeritus professor of experimenta l electr icity at the Un ive rsity 0 f Illishynoi s an d li ves in Urba na Ill where he has been a city a lderma n s ince 1936
1898 Secretar EDNA J OHNSON
822 Atwa temiddot middot A e Bloomington
U HOMER NICHOLSON former high school princ ipa l in Indiana and
Ca li fornia is now a denti s t with ofshyfi ces in Holl ywood Ca l lVIr Nichshyolson a lso has a n A B degree from Harvard Universi ty He and idrs Nicholson a gra duate of Stanford Unive rsity have two sons both docshytors
1899 Sec-retan- L AUREL C TH-ER
510 N M eridian Apt 7 Indi anapoli s
LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was the guest of the Indianapoli s Nashyture S tud y Club on the g roups tour of southeastern Ind ia na on Octoshyber 16 Club members gathered at Laure l to hear iVJiss Thaver relate human interest stor ies of the towns early history and of its fou nder Rev James Conwell her gra ndshyfa ther Mound P a rk where the meet ing was held was gi ven to the town of Laurel by its founder
1900 Secreory MR S EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD
3 150 16th St N W W ashingto n D C
Ano th er exa mple of th e fa r-flung Hoosier in fluence I have been elected pres iden t of the Hoosier Club for southwest iVash ington writes JOH N B ROBE RTSON Tacoma physic ia n
1901 Secre tary MRS ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER
702 Ba llentine R d Bloomington
I am still city attorney for the city o f Logansport writes BENJAshy~IIN F LONG (LL B)
J E FITZGERAW lives in W as hshyington D C a nd is ass istant secreshyta ry of the National Canners Assoshycia tion
1902 Sec) M RS KATI E OPPpoundRMA 1 A -IDR f W S
901 E roth St Bloomington
Mrs CLARA M ULLEH PORTER Reedly Cal briefl y spa ns the yea rs a ft er he r gradua tion Since lea vshying Ind iana mine were nine interestshying years as teacher of languages in high schools Then I added the name of Porter to my ma iden name A son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay ca me to us in due t ime Paul has made me a grandmother Fay is li bra ri an in the F resno Sta te College Libra ry D espi te d istance a nd the lapse of time her memory still cheri shes the thought of India na a nd she finds it still wonclerful to belong to that throng of hundreds who pass throu O h its ha ll s
Th e Novemv e r 19 8 8
1903 Sccretarv GUY C~NTWELL
Gosport
Retiring after forty-one yea rs of school ork is J L HOUSE (XMIO) who reports that he has spent twenty-five years in the EI Centro (Ca l) High School and Junior College and was for sixteen years principa l there
1905 Seacta rl PROF LoGAN ESAR EY
3-10 Henderson Bloomington
CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE ex is advertising di stributor for the Miles Laboratories of Elkhart Ind and lives ill Canandaigua N Y
OnTO WI NGER (A M07) is the new moderator of the northern Inshydiana district of the Church of the Brethren Dr i1inger is president of Manchester College
1906 Secretary Ivy L CHAM NESS 807 E loth St Bloomington
Mrs EDGAR L RrcKA RD is head o f the depa rtment of science Miami ( Fla) Senior High School and state president of Delta Kappa Gamma in Florida
1907 SecretaY 1IIRS AGN ES D KUER STE I NER
IS27 E 3rd St Bloomington
MORRIS 1 MdvIA NAilLAN ex is the present county attorn ey at Lawshyrenceburg and is also pres ident of the Dearborn County Bar Associashytion
1908 Se cretary J ULIAN J BEHR
7-ll Avon Fields Lane Cincinnati Ohio
L EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a member of the city council of Indishyana Pa and a former di stri ct atshytorney of Indiana county
WALT ER A FOSKETT (ex) Pa lm Beach (Fla) attorney is a member of the board of directors of the Alshyleghany Corporation
ROBERT B KELLY ex is president of the Indiana Retail Hardware Association and credit for that news item goes to J j MES A DILTS LLBll Both men live ill i1inamac
1909 Sccretar) GEORGE Vv PURCEL L
425 N Valnut Bloomington
Missed only two games since Bo took over the team writes FLOYD E VhLLBliSON ex president of a teachers placement bureau in Indishyanapolis iVi llia mson is also viceshypresident of the Standard Life In-
IDIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
suran ce Company an d JS a former auditor of state
1911 Sec MR S EDNA HATFIELD EO~oN[lSON
-6 1S Ballentine Rd Bloomin gton
No news is gooc1 news in the case of J H Ke(K J acksonville (Fla) sa lesl1la n who writes in No news as usual Just pegging away
CLA YTON ULREY for many years with the Westinghouse Lamp Comshypany in Bloom fie ld N J is now in North ilianches te r
1912 Secrelary M RS RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF
9023 Vi Outer Drive Detroit Mich
ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teach es mathematics in Lane Technical High School Chicago and is also a mathematics instructor in the Chishycago Technical College evenlrlg school
1913 Secretary MR S MARY N AS H HATFIELD
385S N New Jersey St Indianapolis
ESMO ND P H ERSBERGER is teachshying business la w a t the Parker P ubshylic High School Chicago and is also chairman of a discussion group at the Interna tional House on the Unishyversity of Chicago campus
This is ROBERT A TROTH 96 Orleans horticulturist and his famous multiple apple tree On this tree grow-but let Mr Troth tell his story About five years ago there appeared in my yard a vigorous seedshyling apple tree The first impulse was to use the grubbing hoe the second to play with this tree before breakfast and after supper I began by setting buds on the tree Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana I secured buds from Maryland Michishygan Iowa and Oregon and now I have 127 varieties of apples three kinds of crabapples and six kinds of pears on this tree Two years from now at least 100 varieties will be actually growing on the tree
ROBERT W M CCLASKEY (LLB) is now located in New York City as ma nage r of the Travelers Insu rshyance Company in cha rge of the ofshyfice on Forty-second street
President of the twelfth distri ct of the Indiana Medical Society is Dr H O WILLI AMS (MDI3) His home is in K enda llville
EDWARD E JOHN STON (MDI S) is attending surgeon a t Station Hosshypital Fort Knox Ky
Modest hope frol11 W A VVI SSshyLER (AMI4) No news-just working along and waiting for an old age pension Mr Wissler is a metallurgist in N iaga ra Falls N Y
This is a lso from Niagara Falls My position is manager of the new products division of the R and H Chemical Department of the E 1 du Pont de Nemours amp (O-PAUL J CARLISLE (AMq)
GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of English i~ East Technical High School Cleveland O hio
1914 S ecretary PHOF JAMES] ROBI NSO N
11 30 E 1st St Bloomingto n
Going to Florida Then read this from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AMr6) For the past ten yea rs have been vice-pres ident of the Miami Beach Bay Shore Company opershyating three hotels and two golf courses i1ould enjoy having classshymates and friend s call on me when in Florida just for a chat The same invitation applies for friencl s of Mrs Ku NSCHIK (Gail Doolittle rs)middot
Both a boost and a news note So happy that you are publi shing this monthly maga zin e writes BESshySIE PATRICK DUllBER then adds Taught E nglish and Latin in Woodrow Vilson High School Washington D C last year
1ilrs ALBERT STUM P (Susie Thro) was injured in an automobile accident recently while she ancl Mr Stump were returning fr0111 the Thro family reunion a t J effersonshyville H er leg was broke n just above the ankle
1915 Secretary EARL LIN ES
Box 295 Hightstown N ]
CHARLES E Boonr (AMr6) dean of men at Northern State Teachers Coll ege Aberdeen S D reports that he has been doing gradshyua te work a t the University of Coloshyrado a t Boulder Mr Booth is also head of the psychology department at the Dakota school
21
Heres a man who makes his plans a long ways in advance CLAUDE M SWINNEY writes Am general facshytory manager of the H C Godman Company shoe manufacturers in Columbus Ohio Planning right now to be in Bloomington in June 1940
]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secreshytary-treasurer of the Overmyer lIould Company in Winchester
Its been years since we heard from ELLSWORTH C MURPHY ex now a Chicago attorney and he acshycounts for himsel f as follows After leaving 1 U law school I taught in high schools in Poplar Bluff Mo and Nabash Ind Later received a degree of JD from the University of Chicago in which city I now practice
FRANK M SUMMERS of East St Louis Ill is assistant states attorshyney for St Clair county
1916 Saoclary vVARD G BIDDLE 601 S Park Bloomington
Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge with over a thousand members is the position held by R S WALLACE of Aberdeen S D Mr Wallace is also a commissioner of public safety (fi re and police) in Aberdeen
Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL B RET H (Miller) was recently married to 11r J c Dowell electrical engineer of Pittsfield Mass where the couple now jive Mr Dowell is a graduate of the University of Missouri and is employed by the General Electric Company
1917 S ccretary VILM ER L TATLOCK
116 S 21St St Terre Haute
ALINE CULLISON teacher of bishyology in Tilden Technical High School Chicago says she is still tryshying to interest the boys in my classes in bugs crawdads n things
1919 Secretary MR S ETHEL LARM STEM BEL
Bridgeport
LOUIS FRANCE CONTER Crown Point broker describes himself as just another Hoosier pulling for Bo
1920 Secretary
MRS GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS 5726 Carrollton Ave Indianapolis
BENTON 1 SPRINGER ex is supershyintendent of warehouses and mashychine shops for the Pure Oil Comshypany for Oklahoma and Kansas and
lives in Tulsa Okla He attended the university there after leaving rD
BYRON D ROBERTS and Mrs Robshyerts (Laura Ann Pike ex23) live in Las Vegas N M where Dr Robshyerts is professor of mathematics in the Normal University there They have two children a girl aged ten and a boy aged seventeen
One of the winners in a $200000 prize competition conducted by the James F Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW 15 AM16 Mr Blew spent two whole nights and one day writing his paper Advantages of Substituting Wrought Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Conshystruction of Sewage Tanks
Now a research engineer with the City of Philadelphia Blew has taught thirteen years at Drexel Institute of Technology is an expert on sewage treatment water supply and road conshystruction
1921 Secretary MRS MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK
2 [II S High St South Bend
Persona 1 Homecoming note Was back through the University last October The new buildings and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memoshyries Best wishes for a greater 1 U writes DANTON VVVETH LANDESS ex from Port Allen La Dr Landess received his AB at Louisiana State University and his MD from Tennessee
ROBERT F BURGAN (ex ) is title examiner for the Los Angeles County Flood Control District Beshyfore taking this position three years ago he did similar work for the state division of highways and title companies Nith Mrs Burgan whom he married in 1930 at Santa Ana and their five-year-old twins Patricia and Kathryn he Jives in Los Ingeles
1922 )ecy MRS ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM
424 E Main St Greenfield
Now sales manager of the Flemshying H Revell Company Publishers and with that firm for fi fteen years is JOHN A BURNETT JR He lives in Garden City Long Island
The hobbies of Dr NILLIAM R HARPER ex are he writes polo and St Bernard dogs He is a physician and surgeon in Los Angeles
1923 S ecretary VVILLlAM J HILL
5536 Gwynn Oak Ave Baltimore Md
PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL Spencer is the subject of a sketch in the Biographical Dictionary of Contemporory Poets a new Vhos Who of American versifiers Edushyca tor lecturer writer the book says of her and credits her with the authorship of Lazy Lo)s Tin Rills and Post Bacon Essos
V C STIVERS ex of Kansas City reports that he has been practicing general dentistry there ever since his graduation from Kansas City Western Dental College eleven years ago
The directOl of the business courses at Findlay (Ohio) College is ELBERT E MAGOON ex
ALDEN P CHESTER (ex) viceshypresident and general manager of the Globe Stove and Range Division of the Globe American Corporation Kokomo is this years president of the Institute of Cooking and Heatshying Appliance IV1anu facturers He has served on the board of trustees of the Institute for a number of years
1924 Secretary HERMAN B vVELLS
519 N College Ave Bloomingion
LAWRENCE L OSBORN (AM27) reports that he has introduced two new courses in the curriculum at the University of Maine One was general chemistry for chemistry majors and the other was advanced inorganic chemistry
Production manager of the Packshyard Electric Division of General Motors Corporation is the position filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS in Warren Ohio He is married to DOROTHEA VILLIAMSON ex26 and they have three children Ann [2
Jane 10 and Charles 9 A school teacher for fi fteen years
FREDERICK B ARMBRUSTER of Poshymona Cai has quit the school room to become a mail carrier He has an AM degree from the University
Th e Novemb e T 1938 22
of Southern Cali fornia i1rs Armshybruster (Juanita Hill ex29) teaches in the Los Angeles city school system Rated as a superior teacher she has given demonstrashytions of work for other teachers at the superintendents request
1925 Secretary MARGARET H GEYER
909 Portage Ave South Bend
Since graduation have been in veterans hospitals in Florida and North Carolina writes C W HOFFMAN (MD28) He is now with the Veterans Administration in Oteen N C and adds Health good and enthusiasm high for a great year at 1 U
T E BROADIE (MD28) reports tersely No news then proceeds to give some Still operating the administrative end of Anker Hosshypital St Paul Minn
H H HORNER lives in Howe and is sales manager for the Anker Holth Manufacturing Company of Port Huron Mich
This is the twelfth year as supershyintendent of the White Pirreon (Mich) schools for C C RIN~LER (MS35)middot
HENRY G BADGER AM is a specshyialist in educational statistics in the United States Office of Education Department of the Interior He has two children at 1 U Joe 40 and Leonita 41
M J (Muggs) LORBER reports from Camp Nebagamon vTisconshysin that this summer he celebrated the tenth anniversary of the camp of which he is director I-Ie asked all Indiana people up in that neck of the woods to drop in and see him but it may be a little late for that now
HILBERT E RUST agency supershyvisor in the Indianapolis agency of the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company has been named president of the Inshydianapolis Association of Life Unshyderwriters by the board of directors
R W LEFLER (AM27) is a teacher of physics at the La SalleshyPeru Township High School and Junior College and lives in La Salie Ill
JOHN H Cox is in the coal and lumber business in Nappanee and is married to ELIZABETH HELM (24) according to a note sent to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M P HELM (94) Indianapolis
New president of the Springlteld (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is PAUL B PARKER director of physishycal education at the Roosevelt Tunior High School in the Ohio city
INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
1926 Secreta) ROBERT ALLEN
427 N Nashigton Bloomington
ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK of Vest Hartford Conn writes to say that R L (Jick) KENDERDINE 38 last years grid captain was a recent guest in her home Conshygratulations to Coach Bo on the All-Star game she adds
New Indiana director of the National Education Association is L V PHILshyLIPS 15 principal of Lincoln High School Vincennes A native of Greene County Mr Phillips taught in township high schools there after leaving 1 U He is in his ninth year as head of the Vincennes school
Mr Phillips is a former president of the Indiana State Teachers Assoshyciation and now chairman of its exshyecutive committee As the Indiana member of the N E A board of dishyrectors he will help to acquaint Hoosier teachers with the work of the national group hopes to increase the state membership of 6611 by 10 per cent
LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN (AM27 PhD31) is registrar and professor of education at the Unishyversity of Kentucky Lexington
LEON ARD L WILLI AMSON ex is a partner in the S-W Induction Company Chicago We are enshygaged in manufacturing radio coils which are sold to the radio receiver manu facturers h~ explains
1927 Secretary MRS MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL
801 S 6th St Goshen
MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTENshyBACH (MD29) is in general pracshytice in Elmira N Y
L W M c FAlL (AM28) is assistshyant manager of the Oxford Paper Company in Rumford Me
BEULAH L SMITH (ex) Mrs Clarence Switzer since May 29 now lives on a farm north of Otterbein
She had been teaching home ecoshynomics and physical education in the high school at Delphi
Secretary-treasurer and a direcshytor of the Mayflower Association is the title of CHARLES F BENZEL Sca rsdale N Y He holds similar positions with the Pilgrim Explorashytion Company
Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DAshyMON Moss ex Coral Gables Came to Florida in 1925 he writes durshying the well-known boom and have been operating a construction busishyness for the past ten years
Mrs CHARLES O GAYLORD (Mary Frances Thompson ex) writes from vVashington D C Since attending art school in vVashshyington have been connected with the Library of Congress in the U ni ted Sta tes copyright office I am now an examiner (of maps works of art technical and scientific drawshyings photographs and prints and pictorial illustrations)
1928 Secretary MRS LORETTA HULMAN TAFT
20r E Main St Fredonia N Y
A F RroFSKI (MD30) is located in Vilkes-Barre Pa Anthony Francis II is eight months old and doing well the message reads
I have been a physician with the Inland Steel Company at Wheelshywright Ky for the past three years reports Dr VVILFRID C GETTELFINGER He received his MD from the University of Louisville in 1934middot
Its a little early to announce it but therell be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr and Mrs N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle 28) in Evansville this November 24 Cake and candle are for James Ensle Pierce
MAX E BLUE is a physician for the Kentucky State Board of Health He lives in Burkesville Ky
MAX B VAN OSDOL of Seymour is an analytical and consulting chemshyist He specializes on cereals and cereal products
LEE FORBES CRIPPEN PG is in his ninth year of teaching at Berea (Ky) College where he is associate professor of history and political sClence
1929 Se cretary MRS MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY
r809)0 N 7th St Terre Haute
One of the alumni authors JOHN F BARNHILL (LLD) reports that the entire text of his Hatching the
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AlIlCrican Eagle ha s been set up in Braill e by the National Library for the B lind The book is a narra tive of the American Revolution telling the story of-as the jacket puts itshyPhilip Fenton bashful lover but a bold and devoted follower of Nashshyington Dr Barnhill is also author of SlIrgica Al1atolll of the Head alld Neck
Another alumna to join the du Ponts is MurnEL E PLACE of Wilshyl1lington Del who is now emshyployed as a staff assistant with the R and H Chemical Department E I du Pont de Nemours amp Co
ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has been employed a t the New York S tate Hospital Raybrook s ince July
iVIARGUERITE S CLEME NGER writes I am Intake Supervisor of the Department of Public Charities Akron Ohio
L 1 STEINBACH (AM30) writes in from Danville that he is now head of technica l service for the Chicago Apparatus Company
ARTHUR A KIESS and Mrs Kiess ( Ruby E Miller 28) formerly of Chicago are now living in Hinsdale II where Mr Kiess is a chemist
ROBERT F MILES is film librarian for the 20th Century Fox Film CorshypOlation Beverly Hills Ca In thi s
F W SHOCKLEY 17 has been named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pittsshyburgh In addition he will have charge of all adult education work including late afternoon evening and Saturday classes the university exshytension division and the summer sesshysions
Formerly head of the Universitys Fort Wayne extension center Mr Shockley was assistant to the dean of the University of Wisconsin extension division before becoming director of university extension and summer sesshysion head at Pittsburgh in 1925
pOSItIOn for the last s ix years he was previously purchasing agent for the Sequoia National Parks Comshypany
CLO YD ANTHONY AM (PhD3S) writes in to tell us that d uring the past two years I have been associate professor of teaching social studies and since August principal of the coll ege laboratory school at Cen tral Missouri State Teachers College vVarrensburg
June [939 is the date set by EMMA L DENT MS for receiving her LLB degTee She is now teachshying commercial subj ects and living in Parkersburg VV Va
Heres an idea from C M HARshyIUS JR ex St ill a booster of 1 u especially 1 U band Think outshyof-state a lumni should have greater contact with schoo Mr Harris is managing the KZ P harmacy 111
Casey Ill
1930 President JOSEPH A SMITH
223 E 35th St N ew York City
GEORGE G GRAV ES is associated with the Dunbar Furniture Manushyfacturing Company of Berne as a furniture designer
Mrs JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON reports tha t she and her husband own and manage over 300 acresshythe Sunnymeade Stock Farm near Noblesville They have two boys Duane four years old and Steven two
ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean of oirls and English critic teacher in the laboratory school 0 f Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute
DR EOM UN)) L KEENEY is pracshyti cing medicine in Baltimore and he writes is associated with the chief of the allergy clinic of Johns Hopshykins Hospita l
1931 Sec) M RS PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN
5302 Carrollton Indianapolis
Another I U alumni doctor is W W REY lOLDS (MD33) who is practicing in Fair Haven N Y
Since February I ARTHUR J PALM ER (LLB) has been county atshytorney a t Huntington A former prosecuting attorney there Mr Palmer is a member of the firm of Bowers Feightner amp Bowers
W H (Buddie) THOMPSON is a wood carver in N ashville in the hill s of Brown county
DOROTHY J VVATKINS is assistant to the curator of the vVashingtoni shy
ana division of the District of Coshylumbia public library This is the local history division she expla ins
MARTHA EUl)oRA MOORI is now Mrs Arthur J Shepard Jr and lives in Houston Texas
For the past year GLEN D BROW N AM has been professor of indusshytria l eclucation and head of tha t deshypartment in charge of ex tension education in the University of iVla ryland He now lives in Baltishymore where he formerly had an adshyministrative position with the public schools
Mrs ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS MS has resumed her teaching in the English department of the Marshytin Boots Junior High School Mar-Ion
Mrs GLENN R HOLBEN (Mina Sweeten) report s from Chicago 1 am studying voice in addition to keep ing house for a grand husshyban d
From RICI-TARD H MILLER (MD33) comes this note PAUL STIER [32 MD33] WAYNE GLOCK [32 MD33] MAURICE GLOCK r34 MD34] A P HATTENDORF [29 MD3I] ARTHUR ROSER [31 MD33] A R SAVAGE [30 MD32] and their wives will join Mrs Miller and myself to form a party to a ttend the -Indiana-Purdue game at Lafayette After the game we will be guests at the home of EDshyMUND VAN B USKIRK [3 2 MD33J and Mrs Van Bllskirk for a buffet supper
1932 Secy MRS LAURA JA NE STOUT RAM SEY
3033 Broadway Indianapolis
J B GARCIA (MS3S) reports that he is teaching and studying in New York C ity I would like to obtain a doctoimiddots degree in educashytion he writes
BITTI NA JOHNSON is employed as a s tenographer in the employment office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation in Speedway
Special Development Engineer is the name on the desk of J E HATshyFIELD (PhD36) at the Willard Storshyage Battery Company in Cleveland Ohio Mr Hatfield was forme rly with the Eagle-Picher Lead Comshypany of Joplin lVIo
THEODORE D ARLOOK (iVID 34) is practicing medicine at Elkhart
RALPH E HAMILL (LLB) Indishyanapolis attorney is chairman of the Young Republicans of Marion County He is also president of the Jrvington Republican Club
The November 1038 24
RIDECCA WHITTINGTON is emshyployed as ch ild welfare worker in the ~Iontgomery county department of public welpounda re a nd Ii ves in Cra wshyfordsville
T GORDON MILLETT ex vants it know that hes manager of Milletts Colonial Inc Hammond dealers in sporting goods and electric houseshyhold appliances
FORD L LEMLER (AM37) is the new head of the bureau of visual aids at Washington State College PlIllman Vash M r Lemler left the directo rsh ip 0 f the I U Bureau of Visual Instruction on Septemshyber 15
1933 SlCrelary MRS NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK Carver Hall Apts Leiper St amp Ox ford
Ave Philadelphia Pa
ROBERT S OCLEIlAY (JD35) will spend this winter at Yale U nivershysity assist ing a faculty member in the preparation of a new ed ition of Collifr on Bankruptcy At present Mr Oglebay is employed by Matshythew Bender amp Co Albany (N Y) law book publishers
Dr M E STERN (MD3S) is at present chief re sident of the Willard Parker Hospital in New York City
Look ing after prospective I U students a lways writes MILTON MAIDENBERC of Marion where he is connected with the Nationa l Ch ina Company
HAROLD L RICH (ex) and Mrs Rich (Dorothy A Traylor exB) live in East Lansing Mich where he is field representative for Amershyican Sta tes Finance
If you ever hear the call letters 9ZYL come in over the short rave band on your radio thats EARL F ]VIOORMAN (AM34) a Chishycago research chemist who has taken lip amateur radio as a hobby
DWIGHT N SHERON is the Indishyana sales representative for the Osshyborn Paper Company of IvIarion
WENDELL P METZNER is in the research department of the Monshysanto Chem ica l Company of St Louis d rs ~IIlTZNER was forshymerly Lois Rake 35
1934 S ecretary L YMAN SMITH
Versa illes
RUTH F HOADLlY is working on her masters degree in sociology at the University of Chicago
This is the second year in the Anshyderson High School for CHARLES C DENNY (IM38) who teaches
I~DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
U nited States history and physical geography there
Ass ista nt superintendent of the Sunnyside Sanatori um at Indi anshyapoli s is the work of DONALD V BRODIE (lVID) He has two children Donald Charles and Mary A nn
HARRY P COOPER (JD36) sums up his post-I U career in this fashshyion I have two children Carol and Harry P III I am ass istant secretary of the National Associashytion of Mutual Insurance C0111shypan ies and genera I counsel for the Indiana Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Indiana Union Mutual Insurance Company and the Farmshyers Mutual Liability Company a ll of which my father manages
BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a department store in Chicago
VERA E KE NNEDY is teaching English and speech and coaching deshybate at C rown Point this year
MARY JANE SOMMER is a secreshytary in the Bureau of Engraving iVashington D C
Si nce Apri l ROBERT 11 TERRY has been editor of tbe Batesville H erald-Tribune
RUTH THOMPSON writes S ince g rad uation I have been teaching home economics and am now located in the high school at Frankton where I conduct 4-H Club work
On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUIshyVIELL daughter of the mayor of V inshycennes became the bride of Arthu r A Osborne Marion attorney Reshycently lVI iss Kimmell resided in Inshydianapolis where she was engaged in sec retaria l work at the Stateshyhou se
I am now secretary of the busishyness office of the University Hosshypital of the University of Michigan writes MARTHA LLEWELY DIEHL I have been working there for two years and enjoy it very much she adds
1935 Secretary MRS ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS
co Dr Lester Buis He1ry Ford Hosp Detroit Mich
VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching Engli sh in the high school at vinshynamac
KENNETH H BROWN and Mrs B rown (Rosamond Hoagland GN) middotho were married on July 1 are livshying in New Albany Mrs B rown was formerly an ass istant supershyvisor in the Robert Long Hospital Indianapolis and Dr Brown was an interne in the Methodist Hospita l
Photograph by B achrach
We are pleased to announce the adshydition to the firm of Mr W M McshyFARLAND [ex20] reads a recent statement from the law offices of Croshyfoot Fraser Connolly and Stryker in Omaha where this alumnus is now located
While at Indiana McFarland was a member of Sigma Delta Chi (journalshyism) and played on the varsi ty basshyketball team After earning an LLB at Illinois he practiced law in Vinshycennes later was a public utilities atshytorney in Chicago Other highlights of his career include the vice-presishydency of Consolidated Electric and Gas Corporation outstanding work on the NRA copper code and assi s tant general counsel for American Smeltshying and Refining Company McFarshyland now specializes in federal tax law corporate and financial law
ROSEMARY ROIIRTSO N (PG) now Mrs E ugene R VanMeter lives in Sa lem
JUDSON WEST JR is employed as a research chemist by the Magnavox Company Inc in Fort 1Iayne
ALVfN ]vI BOlWEHS (rM36 PhD37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls Ohio and is employed as a research chemist by the Goodyear Tire and R ubber Company in Akron
A former member of the Physics Club at I U is ca rry ing 011 as head of tbe science department and physshyics instructor at Lincoln High School repor ts EUGENio OCONshyNOR 0 fEast St Louis 111
PAUL J DASHER AM (PhD37) a chemist reports Nothing new sti ll working for B F Good ri ch in Akron
1936 S ecretary RUTH ENGLIS H
Frankfort
RUSSELL B WYATT is employed as an analyti cal chemist for Coleman amp Ball Man u facturing Chem ist s Norwood Ohio
25
WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes from Sewell J I am continushying my studies in Crozer Theologishycal Sem inary and will also teach a cou rse in New Testament Greek
CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prinshycipal and director of education at the Indiana Boys Industrial School in Plainfield
No recession here Dr CHARLES H CON ALLY (DDS) writes I have been practicing in Detroit for the past two years and enjoying lucrashytive practice
GEOHGE W SHONKWJLFR is enshygaged in the real estate business in Chicago
DEAN E CASSADAY is credit manshyager for the Jefferson County (Ky) Medical Society and the Louisville District Dental Society He is also owner of a business bureau rendershying accounting income tax credit and collec tion serv ice to the professhysiona l men of Louisville
FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS PhD writes to tell us that he is pro fessor of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn) College with classes in general anashylytical and phys ica l chemistry
DR GEORGE F MAURER DDS has completed his first year of pracshytice in Muncie after se rving a years
Dance to Battle of Bandsraquo
with
FLETCHER HENDERSON and
RITA RIO at
Sigma Delta Chis BLANKET HOP
November 12 Mens Gymnasium Tickets $198 per couple
CRA
A farm leader is HERSCHEL D NEWSOM 26 master of the Indiana State Grange With his wife (Blanche 1 Hill ex29) Newsom will attend the National Grange convention in Portland Ore November 16 to 24 Between fifteen and twenty thousand Grange members will be present
Newsom left his farm near Columshybus last month to preside at the sixtyshyeighth annual convention of the Inshydiana State Grange held at Goshen Both state and national organizations of the Grange urge members to work for the best interests of rural Amershyica have fought for R F D better country schools rural electricity against insect pests weeds and free railroad passes count Franklin D Roosevelt among the 800000 memshybers
interneship at iVIethodist Hospital in Indianapolis
JOHN E EARLY LLB Evansville attorney was married on September 17 to Miss Ann G Walker a gradushyate of Rockford College
W[L13UH E ROSENBAUM is now employed by the Sherwin-Williams Paint Compa ny in Chicago
Veve asked JULIUS SCIINEIDERshyM AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the Un iversity of Glas-
CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INYESTMENT SECURITIES
Represented by
J DWIGHT PETERSON 19
RICHARD C LOCKTON 30 NOBLE L BIDDINGER 33
E w BARREn 20 C W WEATHERS 17
417 CIRCLE TOWER -- INDIANAPOLIS
gow Scotland where he is 1I0W
stud ying Another outdoor note KE NETH
LEE VVAGNER ex postcards in from Co rpus Christi Texas that he is enjoying the best fishing and huntshying in the U S
RUTH E DICKINSON is teac hing in the elementary grades at J effe rshyson School Anderson
1937 Secretary ELEANOR JONES
26 E Mechanic St Shelbyville
G ELLSWORTH GREENE is now employed by the University as an accoun tant in the comptrollerS ofshyfice He was formerly connected with Price Waterhouse amp Co Chishycago
STEPHEN PAAR is entering his second year as supervisor of the junior boys division of the Butler Mitchell Boys Club in Buffalo N Y
DORIS MARTIN is employed by Joshyseph E Seagram amp Son Inc in Lawrenceburg
MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) was married recently to Vincent Westfall They live in Indianapolis
MAURICE E STAPLEY (PG) forshymer head of the English department of the Calumet City (Ill) High School has been appointed supershyintendent of the Corydon schools
On October 14 BETTY FREDERICK ex became the bride of FRED vVILshySON 36 T he wedding was held in the brides home town of Kokomo and the couple will jive in Indianshyapo li s where Mr Wilson is a senior in the 1 U School of Medicine He is the son of C BEN vV1LSON exIS of Bloomington
1938 Secretary DORIS SEWARO Y W C A Huntington
Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach and assis tant footba ll coach a t the Dayton (Ky) H igh School
DAVID W SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young both of Rochester were married recently Mrs Shafer is a graduate of the Bronxv ille High School and Hyland Hall in New York and attended the National College of Education in Evanston Il l T hey live in Rochester
HELEN L WALDRON (ex) is now Mrs Lester T Gordon and lives in In d ianapo lis
VIRGINIA MAPLE writes I am teaching auditorium and junior high school English in the Centre Townshyship High School South Bend
The November 1938 26
MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND (ex) of Greenfield wa s married recently to Robert R Ruetsch i forshymerly of Saltville Va and a gradushyate of the Univers ity of Virginia The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee middotis
Two 1 U g raduates have been granted a IVa rds for grad ua te study at Harvard U niversity ROBERT F jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler scholarship for a student from Inshydiana and ROBERT S ASHBY was awarded the George Fisher scholarshyship Both men are enrolled in the Harvard La V School
JIAR]ORIE FINKBINER is society ~ditor of the BlooIington (Ind ) World
Womans Director of the Hun tshyington (Ind ) Y W C A is the poshysition held by DORIS SEVARD
VIARTHA S MITH has entered Wellesley College to begin work toward a mas ters deg ree in French
lVJARY J NET HAMILTON is secreshytary to the dean 0 f women a t George Washington U nive rsity tlashingshyton D c where BETT Y W HITLOCK is study ing la w
CECILIA HENDRICKS who s tudied radio a t Columbia University last Slimmer is continuing her work in radio at 1 U
Enrolled in th e Universitys School of iVIedicine at Indi anapo lis is HELEN l~N VACTOR
- ---0---shy
Letters (Co illiilllld fro III page J)
I butchered hi s lJeautifulla nguage~on those intermittent times e ithe r s ide of 18t)o when I could muster cash for ires books and food Cash was mually buttressed by work for a loca l farm implemen t fi r111 a Iivery s ta ble or for Bloomingtons first daily a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end Mr O II Cravens
While Cha rles Greathouse John Ward Emmett Branch Bill Louden et a l including the Smith broth-
A director of the Indiana University Foundation HUGH McK LANDON hon LLD31 was this month elected president of the o1umni association of his alma mater Harvard University Mr Landon is vice-chairman of the board of directors of the Fletcher Trust Company Indianapolis
President of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association since its incorporation in 1921 Mr Landon headed the campaign for money to build Riley Hospital for Children at the Universitys medical center at Inshydianapolis He has also been promishynent in many other civic and business affairs in Indianapolis
e rs (U H and P B ) were building brain power I was developing s inew muscle bone ( including head bone) and endurance through required phys ishyca l work and des ired play with Capt N uckols Dan Louden and Comshy
pany H officially opening Chicagos tfo rld Fair in ramp2
Two year s ago I had the pleasure of agai n meeting Dr Fellows once a ss is tshyant to Pro f Clarke his auburn hair now snow white now head of hi s deshypartment at the U niversity of U tah Earlier I had luncheon with Dr Commons a t our Palace Hotel he was the same quiet learned clearshyheaded man as of yore Occas ionally I contact some former Indiana stushydent
These happenings a nd contacts have been pleasurable a nd good your magshyaz ine is but a nother breath o f good pure fresh a ir in these our somewhat sordid times
LEE C RnD ex9j San Francisco Ca l
--0-shy
Is Rod MightierThan Gun (COillintted from page 19)
trip we took forty- four tuna the secshyond trip sixty-nine a nd the third 124
for an average of twenty pounds per fis h To catch them -ve trolled a t a speed of about twelve miles per hour a nd the skippe r sa id the fi sh were travshyeling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so for they took out about 300 fee t of line beshyfore they could be s topped and then it was a tug-o-war until the fish was in the boat A nyone from 1 U who would like to try his hand a t this get in touch with me and I will a rrange a trip Mr OHa ir offers
L G BALFOUK COMPANY
Manufacturers of Medals Trophies Cups Plaques Class Rings Service Awards Badges Fraternity Jewelry Announcements Favors Programs and Stationery
LLOYD G BALFOUR 07 Presiden
The BOOK NOOK The Campl1s R estaurant
Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
IDJAA ALU~I~n )IAGAZLTE
Indiana University Alumni aTe invited to visit the BalfouT Offices located in 36 principal cities
The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE
is located in the Board of Tmde Building
MARK HANNA 22 Sares Manager
Known for DELICIOUS FOOD
QUICK SERVICE
AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE
Across from Campus on Corner of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues
27
Alumni In Safety Group Six Indiana University graduates
were recently invited by Governor M Clifford Townsend to become memshybers of the Indiana Traffic Safety Council The group of sixty-one memshybers will serve as an independent advisory committee on safety affilishyated with the governors Co-ordinatshying Safety Committee Hoosiers promshyinent in civic education professional and industrial afairs were appointed
I U graduates named include Dean L Barnhart 11 president Inshydiana Democra t ic Editorial Associashytion Rose E Boggs 23 president Indiana State Teachers Association Albert E Cole 14 AM27 southern Indiana district governor Rotary Inshyternational Burton Don Myers AMl1 dean of the University School of Medicine at Bloomington L A Pittenger 07 AMOB president Ball State Teachers College and James J Robinson 14 professor of law I U
After the
INDIANA -IOVA GAME
Bring the Whole Family
to
THE GABLES
even if it is Dads Day
Known to all 1 U
for
FINE FOOD
Homecoming (Collillted from page 6)
Oliver took the kickoff and returned to the Indiana 28 Hursh passed and ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[ where he was forced to punt
Hoosiers Score in Second Period
In the second half Indiana going into the wind was forced back deep in its own territory on punt exchanges Punting from the end zone Bringles kick was carried back by the wind to the Indiana 15 and the ball bounded to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed F rom there Blanke on a reverse scored Kansas States second touchshydown T he kick was wide and score stood K ansas State 13 Indiana o
Hursh s fine ki ck went out on the Kan sas State 12 B lanke punted to the Indiana 4 but Indiana was penalshyized for clipping and it was Kansas State s ball on the India na 47 Folshylowing an other punt exchange Indishyana took the ball on its own 44
Nicholson passed to O liver who scampered down the sideline to the Ka nsas State f4 where he was downed Nicholson then passed to Graham for the Indiana touchdown making the score Kansas S ta te 13 Indiana 6 Hi s kick for point was wide
K ansas State sta rted a drive which ended when Indiana held for downs on its own 25-yard line Unable to ga in Hursh kicked out of bound s on the Kansas Sta te 20 U sing purely power plays Kan sas Sta te drove down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the game ended
--0-shy
I Teach Indian Children (COli tillied fr om page 2)
and live in the dormitories or practice cottages The school is a community in itself and offers a vari ety o f vocational and academic tra ining for the India n boys and girl s Junior cattlemen own thei r own cows and pasture them with the schools herd Care of chickens sheep rabbits and goats is ta ught in a similar way Girls may take along with other slfbjects such courses as housekeepinglaundrying and weaving
Day schools a re similar except thaI the Indian famili es live in the commumiddot nity and children come to the schoo each da y A day school teacher and hi family are rea lly models for the comshymunity_ Everything centers around tht school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than acmiddot tua l teaching In Slimmer he must sushypervi se the community garden and animiddot mal proj ects or take educa t ional leave and attend summer training school beshysides hi s months vacation
The school here a t the agency where I teach is not a typica l da y school Most o f the parents o f my pupils are governmiddot ment employes a nd have li ved by white sta ndards a ll their lives T here are some white pupils and some fullshyblooded S ioux but most o f them are mixed T his group of children is much like a ny you might find in a rural school o f Indiana except tha t they a re someshytimes more timid and shy when strangers are a round
Indian children are espec ia lly adept with their ha nds A little six-year-old can model good cowboys dogs and even a recognizable teacher They love to work with clay crayons or pa int and seem to know how to make things beshyfore an y training is given As a genshyeral rule they are a happy g roup (espeshycially prima ry children ) and love music Many of them a re interested in dancing and sta rt I nd ian dancing as soon as they ca n walk It seems that our whole educati ona l system a ims to tra in the Indian boys and g irls to make a living right here on the rese rva tion so the emphasis is put on voca tional training
A t the Sioux F a ir thi s fall a great cong ress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and for a whole week feasted on bu ffalo furn ished by the game rese rve Famishylies came with a ll their belong ings and made almost a complete circle o f tents a round the fa irg rounds The I ndians brought out their full dress costumes and pa int for each da y they da nced the Omaha with all their triba l customs Their go rgeous eagle-feathered headshyd resses quilled and beaded dresses shirts belts bags and a rm bands made a ll the white people envious
O f course thi s great empty country cant compa re with the southern In-
INSURANCE G BWOODWARD CO Inc Established 189
Personal Effects-Automobile G BWoodward21 Jeff Reed 24 C MWhite ex 29 Presidet Treasurer Sec retaryHousehold Goods-Burglary
Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg Bloomington Ind Phone 2 J 3 1
Th e _Vov e ll v e r 1 93 8
- bull
28
diana trees and hills that I love yet there is something fascinating about this land that gets you We are isoshylated yes but most of the time life is interesting at least we ha ve been able to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ Ive been here
---0--shy
Sons and Daughters (Continued from page 8)
KE--EDY Russell William-son of John William Kennedy ex20 and Mary Russell Kennedy 19
LAMASTER Marce lla Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn Coleman PG3S
LITTELL Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell 12 AM30 PhD33
McCu NTOCK Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L McClintock 24 AM30 and Anna Sears Memiddot Clintock exZI
MCCURMICK Betty Anne-daughter of H D Memiddot Cormick MDOS
McCuRDY Bill Robert-son of W R McCurd y ex16
McELWEE Marilyn--daughter of R J McElwee DDSZ2
McFARLAND Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter C McFarland ex 17
McILVEEN Mary Elizabeth--daugh ter of Mrs AImiddot bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l 26)
McIKTOSH Martha Louise-da ught er of Ca lvin F Mcintosh 13
McMAHAN Jeanne--daughter of A R McMahan OS and Geraldine Sembower McMa han OS
McNABB George B-SOil of G B McNabb 16 MU19
MANN Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J Mann 12 M-SHALL Glenn Linas Jr-son of Mrs G L
Marshall (Kathleen Bright 27) IARTINDALE Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs ]
Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray ex 30) MAUZY Rohert Jamerson-son of H Lou is Mauzy
13 LIEI 1SCHEIN Warren G-son of Tim Meinschein
MS3S MELLEN Roblaquot Lee Jr-son of Robert Lee Memiddot
len LLB07 METCltLF George Philip- son of George B Metmiddot
ca lf 18 MD20 MILLER Alwyn Elizabeth--daughter of W L Milmiddot
ler ex3 MINER Rosem3ry-daughter of F H Mine r AM2S I~NIEAR Olive Ann-daughter of E V Min
niear 34 ~IocK Ernest Leighton-son of Ernest L Mock
ZS MD30 lORRIS PhylJi Rosamonde-daughter of William
A Morris ex13 MORRIS Richard Oscar-son of Paul A Morris 17 MORRISON Margaret Anne-daughte r of W R
Morrison MDIS ~IURJHY Kathryn Lucetta-daughter of Harry E
Murphy 16 MDIS KEFF Elibeth Ann-daughter of F R Neff J3 NU~ER Donald Edward-son of John Franklin
Nuner exIO ODELt Harry Wood-son of H C ODell 10
MD13 PpoundEK Rebecca Anne-daughter of Mrs J Robert
Peek (Marie Tindall ex16) PRlIIT Betty Jean-daughter of Frank Pruitt
ex16 and i-lartha Fowler Pruitt ex17 REts Mary Frances-daughter of Ben C Rees
LLWOS REESE Keith Clifford-son of Clifford Reese PG32 REJ~HARD John James Jr-son of John James
Reinhard 06 LLBmiddot07 RISLEY Herbert Jackson-son of Lee H Risley
12 AM23 and Frances Hood Risley ex 17 ROACH Charles-son of Henry H Roach ex 02 R OUDEBUSH Marion Louise--daughter of Earl D
Roudebush 12 SCHANNEN Lorene Helen---daughter of W H
Sehnnen 12 LLB13 SCHOLZ Marjorie Louise--ltlaughter of F J Scholz
exlS SUIDOWER Charles William-son of C J Se rnshy
bower) 92 and Alta Brunt Sembower 01 SHORT Martha Jane-daughter of Carl Short ex96 SIGI_ER P at ri cia Jane-daughter of Richard R Sigmiddot
ler AM17 SI~GER Ralph Coyner-son of Roselyn Beal Singer
26 S~I1H Leo 1-la-son of Homer H Smith ex14 SITH Margaret Eileen-daughter of H M y ron
Smith 13 S~APP Mary Elizabeth-daugbter of C Ross Snapp
IS and Jenny Asbury Snapp 16 SPENCER Jack Wesley-son of John W Spencer
Jr exIS SPRADLING Charles Robert-son of Chas P Spradmiddot
ling ex12 STONE Jack Arthur-son of Arthur C Stone
ex 12 STU P Margare Ellen-daughter of Albert Stnmp
12 and Susan Thro Stump 14
IDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE
S1URGIS Margaret Ann-da ughter of James D Sturgis LLB12 and Ruth Wylre Sturgis exii
SUTPHIN Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin ex09
SWAN Marian-daughter of Mrs Otto Swan (Lil lian Ridgway 17)
TALBOTT Ann-daughter of Dr J E Talbott OS A Nll O
TA YLOR Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy Taylor MOOS
THOMAS Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth Thomas 16
THOMPSON Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F Thompson 16
TReMOR loyd Henry-son of Victor F Tremor 21 MD23
VEACH Richard Lester-son of L W Veach 18 MD 18
-VALKEN William Peon Jr-son of Wlilliam Walker PG26
WALLS William Hyland-son of William L Walls exOS
WALTERS J Jewel--daughter of Edward C WaImiddot ters 10
WILDERMA N Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M emiddot Afee Wilderman exIS
WILLAN Robert Merril-son of H R Willan IS MD17
WILIIAgtIS Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghormmiddot ley Villiams exl1
WINSLOW Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke Winslow 13
WINTERS Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte of Mattbew Vinters IS AM17 and Ninetta 111ingsworth Winters ex20
WISENBAUGH Paul Eugene-son of W C Wi senshybaugh 13 DDS26
WOODS Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard Wooos MO09
YEAGER Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna Martin Yeager exlO
lIN t Robert Otto-son of Mrs Otto link (Leralurkey 07)
---0--shy
The News Is My Business (Continlled from page 7)
scribers doorstep You see that the linotype keeps moving then read the proof make up the forms get to press and ha ve the mail made up You solicit advertisements You set type in a pinch In fact you must be able to do every duty about the plant then collect acshycounts and try to meet your payroll and bills
Rev John T Priest brought in a cluster of six tomatoes on a three-inch stem Rev Priest not only has a good garden but middotis also a breeder of fancy chickens
Best of all to the country editor is the opportunity to do the community some service because you yourself can diagnose its needs then use your influshyence to fulfill them For example durshying the past year we have made a speshycial effort in this field with editorials headed What Cadiz Needs Among the things accomprished is obtaining a $2IOlooo sanitary sewer system a water-softening plant at $55000 and a directed recreational program The fight is still ahead before some of our other suggestions are accomplished facts
D4ring the past few weeks when Bob Burns sought out the Proudest Small Town in America to award a bron~e plaque to it it fell to my lot to enter
lour town because the editor has
( Continued on page 30)
INDIANA
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
presents
CCke oVew
Clractice ~ouse
The most appropriate gift for the entire holiday season
All the favorite recipes lIsed at the Practice House
Compiled and edited by Home Economics Club of Indiana University
bull Published by Indishyana University Bookstore
bull Send $150 for your copy of the New Pracshytice House Cook Book Mail orders will be filled promptly
INDIAN A UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
UNION BUILDING
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Please send me postpaid copies of The New Practice House Cook Book for which I enclose $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
29
The News Is My Business (Collilued from page 29)
the reputation for knowing most everything about the community Of the 2200 towns entered our little county seat of 3000 persons is holding its head up as the winner Among those listed as giving claim to this honor persons IV ho were born in or near
Stoutes PHARMACY
Cut Rate Drugs Graham Hotel Building
BLOOMINGTON INDIANA
Prescription Specialists
We Deliver Phones 2316-5062
Pause Refresh
COCA-COLA BOT CO Phone 3541 Bloomington Ind
Cadiz or lived here are Clark Gable actor Mary J abe Akeley explorer and educator John A Bingham statesshyman General George A Custer solshydier Percy Hammond drama critic ( who started in this office) W H Holmes archaeologist and anthropoloshygist Lynn Harold I-lough clergyman and author Bishop Matthew Simpson clergyman Edwin M Stanton statesshyman and General Thomas M Vincent Civil War soldier
John Coultrap was surprmiddotised to find an immense bug in his rain barrel a1d he brolght it in to the a fiee to see what hnd of a critter it could be It was a Giant vVater Beetle one of the largest insects to be found in this country large el01lgh in fact to capture and eat fish severallnches long
Of course there are hundreds of other activities that fall to the country editor who accepts his responsibilities My own have been diversified includshying being Sunday School superintendshyent American Legion commander County Red Cross chairman county political chairman election board clerk publisher of the life of one of the countys notables and candidate for office
This is rather a personal account but it is probably similar to that of most any other editor of a successful smallshytown paper Everything is not roses or bouquets Theres not much rest day or night But theres no other job in the world that can take its place once you get into the saddle I hope to ride along in it until my own up-ana-coming boys-and I have four of them-shove me into the background
--0-shy
For Alumnae Only (ConlIued from page 14j
dIe Bloomington Betty Bohannon Terre Haute Jane Clifford Valparaiso Pat DeshyPrez Shelbyville Shirley Dunten LashyGrange Dorathea -R6seE1Ifcm-S-hcridan Janet Lee F1eehart Roswell N M Charshylotte Fleming Indianapolis Jane Gillespie Indianapolis Janet Gorrell iVin amac Mariangenece Helvie Valparaiso Chloe Hooke Noblesville Bety J ohnson Lo~ansshyport Louise Miller Crawfordsville Jayne Milteer Gary Dorothy NewhauSer Bluffshyton Mary Reese Lafayette Lela Jane Ross Bloomington Elizabeth Rowe Glen Ellyn III Jean Wills Inddianapolis Jane Winshyters Indianapolis Jean McMahon ivlemshyphis Tenn
KA PPA DELTA Jeanette Straub Fort Vayne Carol Koeber Fort Wayne Ruth Dippell Huntington middot Eva Jean Craig Fort Iayne Margaret Cieznik South Bend Anna Case Camden
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Norma Balshylard French Lick Joan Bonsib Fort Wayne Sybil Burleigh Springville Ohio Peggy Burrell Indianapolis Mona Virshyginia Dellanoy AnderSon Margaret Edshywards Rye N Y Ann Fuhrer Mt Vershynon Barbara Healy Aurora I11 Conny Hurst Peru Helen Kuehn South Bend Helen Konald South Bend Catherine Karges Evansville Becky Morris Noblesshyville Madeline Pugh Indianapolis H a rriett Rutledge Indianapolis Mary Sailors South Bend Marjorie Scholz Evans ille Mary Helen Schultz Chicago II Liberta Steshyphenson Marion Marjorie Stewart vVashybash Helen Thieme Fort middotWayne Mary Jan e Thompson Indianapoli s Rebecca Valshyley Fort Wayne
PHI MU Jean Bash Indianapo lis Veryl Ann Brownell Valparai so Betty Chatten Milford Marcile Irle Columbus Dotty Lackey Indianapolis Elaine LaHadney Chicago III Dorothy N ussmeier Columshybus Betty Lou Schneider Elkha rt Martha Joyce Smith Valparaiso Mary Woods Poseyville Marjorie Ann Price Columbus Robia Watson Indianapolis Jean Mah a ffey Goldsmith Betty Kay Mills Kohlesville
PHI OM EGA PI Ruth Dawley Michishygan City Dorothy Bottorff Indianapolis Dorothy Knoop Gary Anna Jane Hacker Bloomington Josephine Lockard Milan Jane Fowler Reynolds Gwyn Hinshaw Shirley Norma Jane Henninger vValton Georgianna Giovanini Hill sboro Ellendell Gelltry North Liberty
PI BETA PHI Billy Allen V ashingshyton Mary Jane Batchelder Indianapolis Lois Frank Fort Wayne Vera Judd Sturshygis Mich Patricia Harrison Attica ivlary Elsner Seymour Carolyn Thurston Shelshybyville Betty McCormick Vincennes Mashyrian Ireland Brownstown Betty Jane vVilshyIiams East Chicago middotMadeline Scully Gary Martha Jackson Spencer
SIGMA KAPPA Alice Applegate Winshyamac Ann Clifford Lapel Marian Dingle Chicago III Loui se Foster Bloomington Frances Gramse Buchanan Mich Gretchen Hoppers Middletown Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus Evansville Jane Martin Rushshyville Mary Betty Moldthan Indianapolis Doris Nicholson Evansville Betty Niedershyhaus Haubstadt Roberta Poland Indianshyapolis Elizabeth Sailer Indianapoli s Marshygaret Sturgis Indianapolis Edith Trautshyman Michigan City Vivian Woods Fort fayne
SIGMA PHI UP S ILON Betty Brown Cleveland Bernadine Dee Indianapoli s Ruth Feibleman Terre Haute Shirley Fine New Albany Florence Feigal Louisville Ky Mildred Harowitz Indianapolis Rosashylie Levenson Indianapoli s Lorraine Lewis Gary Jeannette Poss Gary Evelyn Pollak Gary Leona Rabin owitz Indi anapolis Joan Sacks Indianapolis Betty Savesky Marion Alberta Shalansky Indianapolis
ZETA TAU ALPHA Georgia Vorgang Evansville Helen Jean Schwindler Culshyver Vera Bretz Huntingburg Caroline Bueschele vVinslow Mary Lee Coultas Tell City Aline Cutler Hammond Mary Emishyhiser Akron Patricia Gevars LaPorte Dorothy Graf Richmond Florence Hruskoshyvick Whiting Ann Hooge Mobile Ala Betty Irwin Elnora Rachel Jon es Andershyson Margaret Handley Brookville Peggy Myers Wooster Ohio Violet Sexton Indishyanapolis Marjorie McGaw Indianapolis Betty Philip Indianapolis Catherine Richshyart Indianapolis Ann Talbot Lirna Ohio Kathlyn Collier Martinsville
Th e November 1938 30
Fightin Hoosiers (COlllillued fr om page 18)
four-ya rd line Hursh passed to O liver on the Illinois thirty-eight Nicholson passed to O liver on the Illinois sevenshyteen Nicholson passed to Petrick who lateraled to Graham Graham adshyvanced to the Illinois fourteen where he was hit by two Illini players and fumbled with Illinois recovering Indishyana gambled to the las t minute throwshying passes and finally deep from hi s own territory Nicholsons pass to Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni who ran for a touchdown as the game endeu with the final score Illinois 12 Inuiana 2
Nebraska 0 Indiana 0
At Nebraska its third start of the season the Hoosiers found themselves defensively holding a heavier and more experienced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie
In contrast to las t years game against the Huskers Indiana waged an almost entirely defensive battle Neshybraska was within the Indiana twen tyshyyard line six times but the Hoosiers held determiningly to throw back every scoring threat Nebraska attempted four field goals but was unable to capi shytalize on a s ingle trial
The deepest Indiana traveled into ~ebraska territory was early in the first quarter when Nichol son passed to Herbert who was trapped by a swarm of Nebraska players on the Neshybraska thirty- two When the pile was unraveled Dodd of Nebraska had posshysession of the ball Fol1owing an exshychange of punts Herbert ran to the Inshydiana forty-nine for a first down Nichshyolson ran right end to the Nebraska forty-one and his pass was intercepted by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven Neither team was able to gain consisshytently and resorted to punting during the period Hopp 0 f Nebraska kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen and Clasens quick kick into the wind went out on the Indiana twenty- nine Nebraska was thrown for a loss and Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Indiana forty Indiana was penalized to its eleven-yard line for holding as the half ended
To start the second half Mikan kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska twenty-fi ve Callihan ran fi fty yards to the Indiana twenty-five before he was caught by Oliver Nebraska lost s ix yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second kick from placement A fter Indiana had checked two Nebraska offensives Hopp returned Clasens punt to the Inshydiana twenty-one Following the first down on the Indiana twenty-one
IDlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Rohrig attempted another field goal which missed connections Graham fumbled and Brock recove red for Neshybraska on the Indiana twenty-one Hopp and Rohrig made a first down on the Indiana ten Indiana held and took the ball on downs as the third qua rter ended
During the fourth period Indiana advanced to its own twenty-two and Clasen punted to N ebraskas thirty Nicholson passed to Graham and it was intercepted by Burris and returned to the Indiana twenty There Indiana again held A fter another punt exshychange Nicholsons pass was intershycepted by Hopp who ran to the Indishyana twenty-three Nebraska drove to the India~a sixteen but the Hoosiers steadied and Rohrig attempted his fourth held goal and again the kick was no good
--0--shy
Alumni Authors (Coillimted from page IS)
succesion with its atmosphere of inshytrigue and plot all provided the urge to write The result was an amazing numshyber of publications Defoe as these lists show could produce as many as forty-six items in a single year The names of Swift S teele Addison Cotshyton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur frequently The appea rance of the names of Marlborough Oxford and Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd statesmen did not neglect this field of activity
The writers found a la rge public As the author says (pp iv-v)
Pamphlets which caught the popshyular fancy sold like wildfire At least one hundred thousand copies were sold of Defoes True-Born Englishshyman at the beginning of the century More than ten thousand copies of Swi ft s Conduct of the Allies (17 II) were sold in a single month One writer assures us that in a country of nearly five millions the Spectator had a circulation of fourteen thoushysand Forty thousand copies of Sacheverells famous sermon were sold in a few days and a scurrilous attack upon the Doc~r ran through at least a dozen editions
Such are the materials that Professor Morgan has so ca refully investigated and arranged in this volume A third volume covering correspondence diashyries journals periodicals dramatic literature and secondary works will appear within a few months The unshypublished manuscrips will constitute the fourth and final volume
CARL F BRAND ABJ S AM16 Stanford University Ca l
SULLIVANS
Presents
Fashion Park Suits
Don Richards Suits
Dobbs Hats
Interwoven Hosiery
Jantzen Sweaters
Arrow Shirts
(lind many other
fine bmnds
Bloomington
When Youre Back
for that
IOWA-INDIANA GAME
November 12
Dont Forget
STONES CAFE
The Place Where the
Old Gang Meets
One Block South of Campus
on Woodlawn
31
In Closing Editorials
RE DER reaction has had time to set in against the
first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and
on the whole is has been favorable Some of the comshy
ment is printed in Letters but more was picked up in
random conversations with graduates and former stushy
dents back for Homecoming from snatches of talk with
campus folk and from overheard gossip as the editors
hung around the fringes of conversing groups
Some of you didnt like the manner in which you had
to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last
months issue so were changing that and mailing them
flat and folded this time Others thought the Letters
were too long and slim so now theyre being set single
column width Enough comments were heard against the
crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages
so were opening those up with more white space And
we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for
the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really
dont belong there if theres a headline on the page) so
down to the bottom of each page they go this time
Those are some of the changes you asked for If you
ask for more youll probably get them Its worth a try
isnt it
Lets Talk About Pictures
Just about all the pictures taken on the campus in this issue and the last are the work of the Bureau of Visual Instruction in the Extension Division of the University The Bureau its photographers and their cameras have been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE wanted a picture and they deserve some public notice for thei r coopera tion
Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to Uz McMurtrie oS When he saw Howard Tolleys picshyture in the Indianapolis Star Mr McMurtrie frantically ripped out the article and posted it to us Immediately machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new agricultural economics head Letters were dispatched to the D epartment of Agriculture and to the picture agencies with the results on the cover Ideas making a magazine-and covers-as they do the rest of you are inshyvit ed to duplicate the McMurtrie alumnishycon SC Iousness
A Letter of Regrets
True you were promised in October that George Ade hon LLD28 would be a conshytributor to this issue Your indulgence is requested with the assurance that the story by the famed Hoosier author will be worth
waiting for I have been inactive so long so far as writing is concerned Mr Ade tells us that I find it terribly hard to get back into the swing I have a feeling that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry The MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning and readmiddot ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr Ade will regale them in his best manner as he has many a student generation of Iu folks
Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff
Theres a great tapping of trowels scooping of mortar and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office windows these days Its hard to get out a magazine with the new mens lounge going up just outside on the Union terrace As an old-line building constructor of the sidemiddot walk engineer variety we had heretofore specialized in excavation-watching but its just as much fun to observe one building going up on top of another we find When the last scaffolding is cleared away the final sofa moved in and the last drape hung were going to feel that weve really helped
Theres no reason at all why the rest of the alumni shouldnt feel that way about this building and others on the campus for some of them were constructed as a reshysult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund You ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more often dont you think And theres many other things going on down here youve paved the way for-things going on in mens minds and between the covers of books and in the laboratories-things youve helped start and can help to continue Come down and get acquainted with the real behind-the-scenes University and the direcshytion its taking It can help you and you can help it
Coming Up for the December Issue
For December were going to try to let you have a look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audishy
torium A Iso on the agenda is a story by an alumnus whos been pretty busy founding a new junior college down in Kentucky a reshyport on the Foundation-sponsored study of the profession of business counsellor news notes of your classmates the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informashytion on basketball all the regular features and best of all the inaugural address of President Herman B vVells to be delivered on December I Holding the MAGAZINE for that may make us a little late but well be with you
INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913
to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship to further their interests i~ all proper Uays to foster the ideals of the University to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her Work alld her services to the state and nation-Article II CONSTIshyTUTION
DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Venni llion P arke Vigo Clay and Sullivan
RAY THOMAS 22 LLB24 50~ Broadway Gary STANLEY STOHR 28 LLB30 1316 S 18th St Terre Haute District 2- Porter LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County
DAN BERNOSKE 26 MD29 731 Pine St Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON 161203 Merchants Bank Bldg Indianapolis District 3-St Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancoc k Henry Shelby and Rush CountiesALEX CMPBELL LLB30 330 E SuttenfieJd South Bend JOH N MORIU S 12 425 S Main St Newcastle District 4--LaGrange Steuben Noble and Dekalb Counties
WILLrAM HUSSELMAN LLB33 Auburn District 17-Wayne Fayette Union and Franklin Counties WILLIAM ROMEY 27 103 S 14th St RichmondDistrict 5-Newton Jasper and Pulaski Counti es
EMMET LARUE LLB 12 Rensselaer District 18---0wen Greene Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marsha ll Fulton and Kosciusko Countie GUY CANTWELL 03 Gosport
DAN GIBSON 33 Plymouth District 19-Morgan Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen Whitley Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT LLB30 Edgewood Ave Martinsville
CLARENCE McN BB 14 LLB19 4305 Drury L~ne Fort Wayne District 20-Bartho lomew Decatur Jackson and Jennings
District 8---Benton Tippecanoe Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM 26 R 3 ColumbusHARRY SCHULTZ 16 LLB20 JD 20 714 S 22nd St Lafayette
District 21-Jefferson Ripley Dearborn Ohio and SwitzerlandDistrict 9-White Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT 25 309 W 2nd St MadisonBENJAMIN LONG 0 11004 E Market St Logansport District 22--Knox Daviess Martin and Pike Count iesDistrict lO-Miami Wabash Huntington and Grant Counties
WILLIAM JENNER 30 LLB32 ShoalsA HARVEY COLE 07 LLB08 I Y S Broadway Peru District 11-1lontgomery Boone Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey Vanderburgh Warrick and Gibson Counties
WILLETT H PARR JR ex25 730 N Meridian St Lebanon JOE S HATFIELD 30 JD33 901 E Powell St Evansville
District 12--Clinton Howard Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range Dubois Crawford Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS LLB25 R R 2 Box 18~ Kokomo jMES TUCKER LLB30 Paoli
District 13-Madison Delaware Blackford Jay and Randolph District 25-Washi ngton Scott Clark Floyd and Harrison H B ALLM~N AM31 Superintendent of Schools Muncie WALTER CRIM 02 50S W Market St Salem
Anderson-Russell Stewart LLB29 1821 Fletcher SI
Angola-Bluford L Healey 32 Bedford-John S Woolery 29 MD33 Citmiddot
izens National Bank Building Bluffton-W A Patton 01 PattonmiddotMcCray
Co Brookville-Virgil McCarty LLB23 LLM24 Columbia City-Benton J Bloom 07 Columbus-Earl B Pulse 3 1 Reeves Auto
Co Connersvi lle--Byron Jackson 3 1 160S Ohio
Ave Cr3gtfordsville-William F Peacock DDS 3S
Darlington Danville--John D Taylor LLB32 418 E
Broadway Decalur-G Remy Bierly IS Delphi-John Smock 30 LLB32 Evansville-William Little ex28 Citizens
Bank Building Ft Wayne-Alexander M Campbell LLB30
Federal Building Goshen-Fetdie D Nessel 27 801 S 6th St Greencastle-Marshall D Abrams LLB26
24D Anderson Greensburg-William L Woodfill LlB34 Huntingt on-Arthur Palmer LLB31 S3 E
Market St Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne 2S 240
N Meridian St
BosIon Mass-W C Mattox ex09 24 Manmiddot emet Rd Newton Center
now ling Green Ky-Frances Richards AM30 1340 College St
ChampaignmiddotUrbana IIl-Prof O R Overmiddot man 10 AMll 610 W Nevada St Urbana
Chicago 111-James Kiper 32 3S E Wacker Drive Room 776
Cincinnati Ohio--Charles Gerhart 28 Adshyvertising Department Proctor and Gamshyble
Cleveland Ohio--Walter Koenig 31 MS32 16360 Euclid Ave East Cleveland
Colorado Springs Colo-Mrs Telfer Mead 23 E Boulder St
Columbus Ohio--George F Arps AMOS 216 E lane Ave
Denver Colo-C E Compton 9S S07 E amp C B uilding
STATE CLUBS (The off ieer listed is the president)
Indianapoli s-(women) Mrs Stuart Wilson 22 4307 Park Ave
Kokomo- Clifford Lineback BPSM32 21S N Purdum
laGrange--Gerald Fisher 29 LLB31 Lake County-Herschel Cole 23 MD25 247
Humpfer Hammond Crown Point-L F Conter ex19 317
N Main St East Chicago--Joseph MOStly 20 AM Z2
LLB23 U S National Bank Building Gary-H L Kahan 17 MD 19 73S
Broadway Hammond-A B Scott 30 Recreation
Center Lebanon-John R Porter 17 MD19 Liberty- Walter F Bossert LLB07 Linton- Gerald Landis 23 MS38 669 N
E 1st St logansport-Troy Babcock DDS26 Broadmiddot
way and Fifth St Loogootee-Hugh Gray ex28 Madison-Eugene Cooper LLB37 SOS Broadshy
way Marion-Merrill Davis 12 MD14 National
Bank Building Mentone-Charles Manwaring 32 Mt Vernon-W E Jellkinson 26 MDZ6 Muncie-Edgar Davis IS MD19 1423 E
Main St
IN OTHER STATES Grand Rapid s Mich-John Alan Smith 30
1026 Cooper Ave S E Houston Texas-James G Donovan LLB08
1225 Height s Blvd LOllisville Ky-Lawrence Tuley 04 Pickshy
rell amp Craig Los Angeles Cal-Robert E Harris 2S
AM26 Publications Dept Los Angeles Junior College
Miami Fla-Park H Campbell LLB25 S30 Seybold Building
Milwaukee Wis-Harry Wilmer Donovan 23 4201 N Farwell Ave
Minneapolis Minn-Dwain M Ewing 30 909 Northwestern Bank Building
New Haven Conn-Frank R Goldman 12 LLB13 S Washington Manor
New York N Y-Charles Benzel 27 Suite 4500 20 Exchange PI
New Albany-Irvin Fleischer 33 174() Demiddot pauw Ave
North Vernon-Fred Matthews LLB23 Peru-Mrs Leonard Kolb17 176 E Sth St Petersburg-Lester Nixon ex36 Plymouth-Dan Gibson 33 825 S Michigan Princetn-Maurice M Miller LLB 31 110
S Hart Richmond-J Brandon Griffis LLB16 Maymiddot
fair Roche ster-Charles Hoover 32 Barnhartshy
Van Trump Co Rushville- Walter Keaton 3S IOSY E 2nd St Salem-Emmett C Mitchell ex06 E Hackmiddot
berry St Seymour-Mrs Ward Gossman 30 407 S
Chestnut St South Bend-Charles Hahn LLB32 412middot1S
JMS Building Spencer- Mrs Willis Hickam Jr 18 Sullivan- John S Taylor 10 LLBII 117
N Section St Te rre Haute-J Norman Bivin ex27 22 1
National Building Vincennes-Eugene V Donie 33 519 N
4th St Wabash- Philip Eskew 1I1S33 Higb School Washington--Carl Chattin 34 JD3S 7 N
Main St Williamsport-Mrs Bertha B Fleming ex09
Omaha Neh-E S Brumbaugh 12 LLB13 306middot7 Patterson Building
Oklahoma City Okla-C M Branson lLB09 1601middot3 Petroleum Building
Philadelphia Pa-N O Pittenger 29 Swarthmore College
Phoenix Ariz-John W Laird 00 Phoenix Junior College
Providence R I-Mrs Ruth Telfer Barrett 14 2S() Massachusetts Ave
Pullman Wasl1-Mrs W C Kruegel 94 604 California SI
St Petersbllrg Fla-Nelson Poynter 24 St Petersburg Times
St Louis Mo-Joseph Garnier ex27 4S7 N Kingshighway
Washington D C-John J Reinhard 06 LLB07 3213 Foxhall Road
Wichita Kas-Clinton C McDonald 22 AM24 PhD26 University of Wichita
Laugh at Wintry Blasts
WITH
GLENDORA TEMPLETONS
WONDER COAL
A Hoosier Product
of Genuine Merit
STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY Chicago Terre Haute Indianapolis
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