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alumni • magazine - AIM @ IU Home
THE • OCTOBER • 1940 ALUMNI • MAGAZINE THE » OCTOBER « The Cover 1940 THE' OCTOBER' 1940 INDIANA NDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE Vol. 3 No.1 News University Since Jun e Alumni Notes by Classes Alumni Club News By J ames D. Thompson , '42 1:3 By Hilda Henwood , '32 20 _____ ____ _______ ___ _ __ . _ _____ __ 31 Features Wendell Willkie ___ _ By Nathan Kaplan , '40 03 Paul V. McNutt _ __ __ By Robert E. Allen 3 Examining . . . LU. Business School Guid o Stempel By Chauncey Sanders 10 By Dr. Frank Beck, '95 1<) Featured on the front cover of this issue is the first LU. alumnus ever to be nominated for the Presidency of the u.S.-Wendell Willkie. Nate Kaplan has written the story of Willkie and his rapid rise in the political world. Also a story on Paul V. McNutt and his part in the Democratic conventi on at Chi cago by Robert E. Allen is included in this issue. See editorial "Co ncernin g Politics" on page 32. Next month we are planning a com posite story on all LU. Alumni who are candida tes for office on b oth tickets in the November election. Sports Hustlin g H oosiers 16 Alumni in the Sports World 13 Indiana University Alumni Association PrcJident. AUXANDU !\J . CA~PREU_. I.LD ·30. Fori Wayne Departments Yice-PreJ., RAY C. TIIOM,U. Sec retary, MRS. ETHEl. H oosier Authors I n closing . . . Editorials Book Reviews L 32 L"t~1 '22. LI.D'24. STDU1E L, Car~' '19, AM '::4 , Indi anapo lil T reo.mrer, WARD C. DIDDl.E, '16, D1 oomiog lo n EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Staff: GEORGE F. HEIGH WAY, LLB' 22, editor; ANDREW G. OLOFSON, AB'39, managing editor ; 1vy L. CHAMNESS, AB'06, AM'28, associate editor. Editorial Board: E. Ross BARTLEY, '14; WARD G. BIDDLE, AB'16; MRS. ALTA BRUNT SEM BOWER, AB'Ol; JOHN E. STEMPEL, AB'23. 1938· 41 L. DEAN DENTON MR' , J, OLIVE 'II. Cos ben '07, Columbia City LEW" , '14. Indi aDapo Ji, DA"NII AR T, DLOOM, DELDON 1939-42 E. AI..U:N, '16. AM '24, Soulb Bend 0". BERT E. ELLIS, '19, MO'21, Indiaoapolil JUDGE CURTI! C. SnAKE, LLO']O, lodianapolie FRANK P ubli sh ed monthly, except ] uly, August, and September, by the Indiana Univ ersity Alumni Association. Offi ce of publication: Spencer, Indiana. Editorial office: Uni on Building, Indiana University, Blooming ton, Indiana. Annual subscription rate $.3.00 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni As sociation). Single copies 25 cents. Member of American Alumni Council. Entered as second -class matter Oc tober 9, 1939, a t the post office at Spencer, Indi a na, under th e Act of March 3, 1879_ 1940-4 3 LEMlIlE:L A. PITTENGER, '0 7. AM'OS, Muncie ']2, LLB '22. JD'23, Chicago '26. Elkhart OR , E. S, CILCIIIU5T. Sc hool or Dentistry Alumni Juu:,S BREWER. '31. A M ·33. School of Music Alumni WALTER E. THEANO", L. S. AJI:~STRO:"G. Hoosier Authors Sky Defense Dive Bomber. By ROBERT A. WINSTON, AB· '35, Ensign, U.S.N.R. Illu s trat ed by Walt er (New York: Holiday Honse. 1939. Pp. 191. Illustrat ed. $2.00.) 1. Dothard. Robert A. Winston's Dive Bomber h ecomes a hook of particular significance al a time "'he n, forcibly impressed by the military importance o f well·trained, modern, and ade· quale air forces, allention naturally Iurns to Ollr own side of Ihe Atlantic and our own de fenses. We immediat ely examine th e strength of our naval air force, th e eyes and spearheau of ollr welJ·known first lin e of defense. Is it adeqllal e? Is its eq uip· ment modern and equal to th e tasks it is lik e ly 10 be called upon 10 perform? And most important of all, since no machine is bell er than the man who opera tes it, how about it s personnel? Does it consist of se· lec ted quali fied men? Are they well and Ihoroughly trained , tou ghen ed, morall ed, and ski lled in Iheir profession, abreast of and familiar with Ihe latest developments and tactics of aerial warfare? Are th ey likely 10 be able to cope successf ully with future con tin genc ies and fast developing tact ical s itu atio ns which are yet 10 arise and accord· ingly are not now included in th e course of Iraining? Are our naval pilots men of Inlua· live, enterprise, and valor, capable of doing I heir jobs? En sign Winston demonstrates cl ear fore· s ight in anticipaling these questions in th e minds of layme n and answering th em in an enlerta inin g manner. He tak es th e read e r Ihrough the various rigorous ph!lses of se· lec li on, elimination, and IraIlllng of th e flying cade t, introduces him 10 barra ck room life at th e training stations and to th e lighter socia l life 01 the corps. Th e book bas caught the unqu enchable op irit of young avialors through the long lough lour from the elimination base to war ga lll es and maneuvers with the fl eet. It deli cately breathes th e fra ternity of patient concern when the return of a fellow ·trainee's s hip is delayed , and appropriately reminds one Ihat calastrophes are proporlionateiy rare. The long tour through classroom and ground·sc hool rudiments 10 combatant flying seems perfec tly compensated by th e laller Ihrill of doing a job well in Ih e exciting fl ashes of split·second accompli shm ent. Work, peril, a nd sweet triumph foll ow swift ly chap· ler upon chapter in Win slon's inilllitabl e easy styl e. Th e compelling inleresl of Dive Bomber is evidenced hy the mild and amusing CI)I' barrasslll ent it ca used Ihi s reviewer for sev· e ral wee ks. In a moment of kindly aba nd on he le nt Ye Ed's volume of Dive ROil/bel' to a plebe in Ihe New York S ia le M ~ r c hant i'I'J ari ne AcadelllY, Ihen li ghlly illieresied in naval av ialion. For some we eks i t was Ill(' book of the moment for Ih e cadet co rp " Ihrea te ning laslingly to cliver l cade ls from Ihe sea 10 the air. passing mysl erious[y from hand to hand Ihrollgh Ihe corps, being r ead Indiana Alumni Magazine clandestinely post·taps and pre·reveille or from behind Standard Seamanship or Rowditch duro ing studv period s, always a pace or two ahead of th e one·man cade t detail directed to retriev e it-whil s t Ye Ed was clamoring for "copy." The glossary of terms, diagl'ams and tahles o[ Service and manufacture r's identifications in the appe ndix whet the layman 's interest in the s hips a nd flyin g. Dive Bom.ber is an eyewitness, first·hand, participator 's accoun t present ed in Winston 's compelling, easy mann er, interspersed wilh his personal exper ien ces and aneedotes de· lightfully told. His lim ely co mprehensive ;;ur· vev of modern co mbatanl aerial training is E"xtremeiy int eresting reading. GEOHG£ W. R. HU GHES, AB'13, LLB'14. Fort Schuyler, N.Y. Indiana Glass",are! For Librarians [I nion Lisl 0/ Serials in Indiana .Libraries. Compiled and edi ted by Fava E. Goan, as· ,islant reference librar ian, Indiana U niver· sill'. Indian a Unio n Lisl Commillee, La· fayelle, Indiana, 1940. (Lithoprinted by Edwards Brothers, Inc., Ann Arbor, 1l'Iichi· gan. Pp. 680. $5. [Twilltex]' $6.25.) This uni on list cO IHains th e holdings of 16 of Ihe publi c, coll ege, unive rs ily, institulion· ai, and specia l libraries of the Slate. "A serial was defin ed as a ' publication not is· sued by a govern men I agency , appearing :1t reg ular o r stat ed period s of less than :.) year, And inc luC\illg articl es o n various sub· jects.' This automati cally ruled ont annuals. monograph s, gove rnm ent pnblicalions, al· manacs, gifL books. Many titles th a t do not nalurally fall with· in Ihis definiti on nre inclnded because of Iheir inlrin sie value. The Union List of Serials in Indiana LiIJraries has made ihe word " serial" more elastic to include many publication s for coll eges and universities wilh· in the State. Publi calions of a local illteresl other than the publicalions of colleges and uni ve rsiti es have likew ise been incorporated. By actual co unt th ere are 11 ,907 lities, w ith full bibliographical data, in as far as it was possibl e to ob lain Ih e informalion. This gives to Ih e scholars of th e SLate a valuable reference tool to loca te gaps in the serials of Iheir own librari es as well as to find others not among IJleir own holdings. Six hundred and sixty.two of the ilems are publications that have bee n published in In· diana lor a part of the life o f the publi ca· lion , if not during ils entire e xislence. In thi s dHY o f union li sl activiLies it is sca rcely n ecessa ry to ennumerale th e val uabl e co·operati ve sl'rv ices I.hal a work of this kind does afford Ih e schola rs of the S tate. As a ba sic list, it reveals Ihe slrcngth :md weakness of col lec tion s Hnd serves as a c1earing·hou se for tran,;ferring duplicate pub· lications aud pla cin g Ih em where they are mosl need ed. ESTELL,\ WOLF. Indiana University. H Beautiful Hand Blown Tum blers With I.U. Seal in Color That University touch for your own hom e. Modern in design, Ih ese tUIll· biers are guaranleed by th e mak ers - G la ssy lvania Company , Oil City, P" .-IO sa lisfy you or your mon el' ba c k. Show your friends how mu ch you valu e your I.U. con nection s by us ing these e;lasses with the two· color at · tra cl.ive seal in University colo rs. _C~p_a~d_ ~a~ ~~W!.. I.U. Alumni Office 301 Union Building Bloomington, Ind. Please send at once, prepaid,.......... dozen gla sses with LU. insignia as ch ecked below, for which I enclose my check for $ .................... .. ............ doz. 5 oz. size $2.50 ...... ...... doz. 10 oz. sIze $2.95 .... doz. 12 oz. size $3.35 .se ts (l doz. each size) $8.50 Name Street Town 1 'ike •• •• • dlGJneqi/teA u/ J.U. ~eep !5~ dUST A YEAR AGO THIS FALL ON THE EVE OF THE ANNUAL PURDUE - INDI ANA GRIDIRON CLASSIC, THOSE WHO GATHERED FOR THE THIRD BIEN NIAL UNION BOARD RE UNION LIGHTED A FIRE IN THE FIREPLACE OF THE UNION LOUNGE_ ALUMNI AND STUDENTS YOUNG AND OLD WHO WERE PRESENT ESTAB LISHED THE TRADITION PROVIDING THAT THIS FIRE SHOULD BURN ETERNALLY TO SYM BOLIZE THE SPIRIT OF FRIENDSHIP W H I C H EMANATES FROM INDI ANA UNIVERSITY_ THE FIRE OF HOSPITAL ITY BURNS FOR YOU IN THE INDIANA MEMORIAL 'INION 2 A First Book Hannah Courageous. By Mrs. LAURA LONG, '14, of Columbus, Ind. Illustrated by Ed ward Caswell. (New York: Longmans, Green and Company. 1939. Pp. 246. Illustrated. $2.) Other days and other ways seem very real to us in this appealing juvenile by Mrs. Laura Mooney Long of Columbus, Indiana, about a lovable Quaker girl. Well know n as a contributor to Child Life and kindred pub· lications, Hannah Courageous is Mrs. Long's first book. Hannah Nicholson grew up in southern I ndiana when the sin of human bondage weighed heavily on the consciences of all who dwelt in littl e White River community. Like high lights among grayed half-tones, thrilling episodes of the Underground Rail road stand out in the succession of homely scenes and incidents which make up the daily lives of these somberly clad, high-minded folk. In spite of a training which banned all worldliness, Hannah retained a normal girl's love of adornment and excitement. A friend ship with a young lady of fa shion from Louis ville, with whom her Quaker brother fell in love, broadened her horizon . But it was H an nah's talent for drawing like nesses of her family and friends which fi nally enabled her to escape to the fuller life of which she dreamed. "As if the devil himself had pushed thy finers, " stern Aunt Margaret and others had often said. But, when one-third of White River community started to Kansas, to help that troubled terri tory "come in free," what a comfort to have likenesses to keep! In the end, we rejoice with Hannah when the editor of a Washing ton newspa per feels that her cartoons depict ing the evils of slavery can aid the abolition cause. LOUI SE EMBREE, AB'Il. Princeton, Ind. A Good Siart Two Solitndes. By MARTHA ELLEN WRIGHT (Mrs. MONROE SHAKESPEARE), AB'32, of Kalamazoo, Mich. (Philadelphia: The Penn Publishing Company. 1940. Pp. 306. $2.) MARTHA ELLEN WRIGHT is to be congratu lated upon th e publication of her first book, Two Solitudes. The jacket says, "Two Soli ludes is a skillful and sensitive portrayal of an unusual love." It is more than that. It might well be called a "Young Girl Looks at Life," for through the pages of this liyjng and breathing romance there is also an honesty in conviction, a sur,eness of the path, and a young girl's determination to face life. Alix Cunningham has an awareness that is perhaps typical of no other generation so much as it is of the present one that weathered an eco nomic depression and its ensuing dis couragemen ts. The world is not all moonl ight and roses coupled with easy living for h er. She is willing to sacrifice and suffer for her love, and is also willing to wait until the r eal thing comes along even if the real thing isn't tinseled with comfort and wealth. Two Solitudes is a good book, honestly written , carefully plotted, and well balanced. Doubless it will draw a big reading pub lic. But I.he book itself is more important than its reading publi c for it holds the promise of better things to come. It shows that thi s new wri ter has developed power over both characters and situations. One has the feel· ing that no matter in what medium Martha Ellen Wright chooses to tell a good story she will have success, whether it be light romance or a more serious form of literature. Alix Cunningham is a lovely young girl struggling to grow up, struggling to fi ght free from a domineering and unsympathetic mother. As chief character, she carries the story with si mple dignity and touching appeal. Miss Wright's two men of the story seem ("q ually as real. Mart Cunningham fits the romantic picture exactly and David Bellaire, who is an undergraduate at Northwestern. might have come directly from Mi ss Wright's own Indiana. Mrs. Cunningham tri ed to buttress her dwindling fortune with the only resource she had, two beautiful and marriageable daughters. When she read in the newspapers that her late husband's dashing nephcw had returned ill from an expedition into the jungles of South America and was con val escing in a West coast hospital, she sent for him to come to her immediately for hi s recuperation . Since he was orphaned and had no claim upon any family, he chose to accept the cordial-so unding invitation. He knew, though, that Eloise Cunningham was not given to unselfish generosity. "What a satisfactory hu sba nd he will make for either of the two girls," thought Mrs. Cunningham. However, when Alix fall s in love with him and prepares to jilt her wealthy college friend , Mrs. Cunningham shows her claws, especially after she discovered that the South American adventurer had sq uandered his fortu ne on the fruitless ex pedition. That any young girl, in h er right mind, would choose a sickly man, nea rin g his thirt ies, with a scarred face rather than a weal! hy football hero is more than Mrs. Cunningham co uld believe. Th e story holds your interest to the end of the last paragraph. P erhaps Two Solitudes will lead the way to the establishment of a second era of Hoos ier dominance in the field of the romanti c novel. What other st ate has a better right in that field than one that produced Charles Major, George Barr McCutcheon, and Booth Tarking ton? Don 't be surprised if Miss Wright in the next few years authors the great Amer ican novel. FRANK A. WHIT E, AB'23. Indianapolis. First National Bank of Bloomington Indiana University's Bank Since 1871 Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The October 1940 INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE Volume 3 October, 1940 Number 1 Mr. and Mrs. Willkie ride in triumph as thousands cheer at Elwood. Wendell Willl{ie Is First I.U. Alumnus To Be Nominated for U. S. Presidency Started Surprising People Back in the Days When He Was an Undergraduate at I.U.-Latest Surprise Is Being Nominated by the Republican Party By Nathan Kaplan, '40 Two years ago , at the Foundation Da y banquet in In- ' dianapolis, Dr. WILLIAM LOWE BRYAN, AB'84, AM'86, Hon LLD'37, gazed down from his septuagenarian vantage of wisdom and experience and appraised WENDELL WILLKIE, AB'13, LLB'16, Hon LLD'38, in these words: "Wendell Willkie reminds me of Theodore Roosevelt. He looks like that Roosevelt. He has the same stocky, powerful body. He has the same masterful intelligence, which is at the same time masterful will. We are very proud of our boys who run and win along with the best in the world. How proud we are of our men like Willkie, who can stand up and fight along with or against the Indiana Alumni Magazine strongest. Roosevelt, the First, would have taken Willkie to his heart. When Roosevelt, the Second, meets Willkie, he knows that he has met a man. "Moreover-you may not know this-as often with a great fighter, this realist is also at heart an idealist." Two months ago, at Elwood, 235,000 persons endorsed Dr. Bryan's appraisal as Wendell Willkie became the first Indiana University graduate ever to accept the nomina· tion for the Presidency of the United States. This was the man, a realist because he is a fighter , an idealist because he fights for ideals, who had been the laughing, shouting, roaring radical of the J.U. campus In ., oJ 1& rso 1u ti 0 U i, !t I'BP(II,Il, Thai at this our first meeting of the Bq;.rd of Trustees of Indiana University since the nomination of WENDEll 1. WalKIE, A.B. 1913, L1.B 1916, honorary LLD 1938, as a candidate for the Presidency of the United States, we record our pro fOWld pleasure, satisfaction, and pride in this great and unique dislincrion which has come ro one of our mose esrcemed, respected, and beloved alumni. Jll1a I. 1,4(1 ...0-1-0'''", J.bluwl The I.U. Board oj Trustees tooli: pride in the achieve ment oj the Jirst I.U. alumnus ever to be nominated Jor the Presidency oj the U.s. and passed this resolution at its Jirst meeting Jollowing the Philadelphia cOl/vention. his undergraduate days. This was the man to whom no authority was justified , then or now, if it trampled on the merest rights of its constituents. This was the man who at 20 had championed his beliefs in the face of odds and gods and who at 48 is the same fighter he was at 20, his exuberance tempered with experience, his fervency tempered with knowledge, but his idealism neither tempered nor tam pered with. The Elwood acceptance was the culmination for Wendell Willkie of a rare feat. He had ridden the preca rious surf board of big business on a tidal crest of public opinion from TVA to a Presidential nomination. He had done it with his hair in his eyes, a grin on his face, and his right hand waving at the spectators. When he stepped off hi., frail craft to trek inland on his campaign, he still had his equilibrium and his breath. WilIkie's University reputation grew out of his frequent battles with the University administration. WilIkie's na tional reputation stemmed from a battle with a national ad: mInIstration. For while the Willkie phenomenon, as it has been called, has been 48 years in the growing, it be gan, insofar as its public aspects are concerned, in 1937, when Willkie fought TVA from the Tennessee valley to the national treasury. The TVA fight was a no-decision contest, but it brought the case of the private utilities before the public. Told by Wall Street business associates to "pipe down" rather than arouse New Deal reprisals against business in general, Wilikie only yelled louder, pointed out that with TVA's privileges in the Tennessee valley, his Commonwealth and Southern subsidiary in that district could market power 35 percent cheaper than TVA was doing. Court fights and Congressional investigations brought national impor tance to the squabble. In luly, 1939, David Eli Lilienthal, also a Hoosier and head of the Tennessee Valley Author ity, handed Wendell Willkie a check for $78,600,000 and private utilities ceased to exist ill the Tennessee valley. But Willkie had gained sympathy and stature, though Commonwealth and Southern had sold its holdings. His remark on taking the check did nothing to hurt his case: "This is a lot of money," he told Lilienthal, "for a couple of Hoosiers to be kicking around." This same Willkie and his college cronies once had fought the constitution of the Indiana Union, because the Union Board was self-perpetuating and not selected by democratic methods. Then he had put up an unauthorized and un recognized opposition slate and stumped the campus until a committee was named, consisting of the late Professor Amos Hershey, PAUL HARMON, AB'14, AM'15, PhD'20, now professor of physiology at l.U., and Willkie himself, to modify the Union constitution. The committee's modi fi cations were not accepted, but eventually the Union con stitution was revised to permit a more democrati c selec tions of board members. In July, 1939, the United States was beginning to antici pate the next year's Presidential election. The "third term" question was young enough to be a mystery. But more of a mystery was who the Republicans could nominate to give the New Deal a race. There didn't seem to be an outstand ing jockey in the Republican stable to ride the elephant. Into this incipient quandary suddenly flashed the name WilIkie. TV A had strengthened him. He was accepted now as America's number one business man. His integrity was unquestioned. His crusading spirit had ca ught the public, which loves a fighter, just as years before it had caught the campus, which also loves a fighter. Color? The man was trimmed in neon. And from somewhere rose a cry . . . "why not WiIlkie?" The cry, however, was threatened with infantici de. There "Standing room only!" was the order oj the day duril1g the convention at Philadelphia when Wendell W illkie held press conJerences at which he answered all questions and pulled no punches-to the delight oj the newsmen. The October 1940 were innumerable reasons "why not Willkie." First of all, be had been a Democrat and admitted having cast his vote for Roosevelt and contributed to the Democratic cam paign fund in 1932. Furthermore, although he stood at the top of the business world, " Big business" was a stigmatized class when associated with politics. And of all big businesses in which to be engaged, publi c utilities, which had acquired a poor reputation during the depres sion, undoubtedly was the worst, from the standpoint of a possible Presidential candidacy. But had not this same Willkie, when new to the I ndi ana campus, aligned himself with the unorganized, the underdogs, the stigmatized barbarians? Had he not, ill his first major political test, split the ranks of the or ganized and elected his friend, Paul Harmon, president of the sophomore class? What mattered class or position as long as he could fight? Columnists and commentators took up the Willkie cry from coast to coast, but in the same breaths listed the rea sons why Willkie had no chance. Raymond Moley dubbed it "a study in irony." "But," said Moley, "for some curious reason, after the professional politicians heave the last shovelful of con versational sad on Willkie's chances, they still cannot leav~ him for dead." Inadvertently, the commentators were taking the Willkie case to the public, just as Willkie had taken the utilities case to the public. Individually, with no concerted effort and little ulterior motive except to point out the irony of the situation, they boosted "the man as the finest candi date available, then listed the overwhelming odds against him. Writers and radio men alike sang the same lyrics to the Willkie tune. The public, which had accepted the tune, tired of the lyrics, and the Willkie boom was born. The passing of time, the Gallup poll and the Republican convention proved the power of the public. The WiIlkie boom grew with each day, the Gallup poll measured its growth, the convention proved it had reached maturity. H ere is the house at 523 E. Third Street where the Jour Willkies lived together at I.U. Julia kept house for her three brothers--Fred, Bob and Wen-and presided as hostess at the mallY informal discussions that were so popular. Indiana Alumni itIagazine Like his boyhood idol, Theodore Roosevelt, Willkie is a proliJic reader. Starting early in liJe with his Jather's 6 ,OOO-volume librar)" he has kept up his reading ever since, biographies alld historical-economic books being his main reading diet. He also has written many articles Jor maga zines al/d has had several book reviews accepted by top 1I0tch publications. The Republican convention at Philadelphia was typical until Willkie began to move. He had no lieutenants. He had no party boss henchmen. He had no trades to make and no axes to grind. He visited the delegates personally, talked with them, argued with them, sold them. Opponents yelped at these unfair tactics and put the man down as mad. But the gallery chanted "We want Willkie!" The wires buzzed "We want Willkie!" The mails carried "We wa nt Willkie!" There is no stopping a tidal wave at its crest. Willkie was nominated on the sixth ballot. Those who know their University history remember smilingly another politica l convention in which Willkie was a figure . In 1912 he was chosen to stage a mock Democratic convention on the campus. These conventions, in days be fore radio , were events of importance. Delegates to rep resent all states were selected, speakers were lined up , a date was set. The date turned out to be the elate of a play-aU Purdue-Indiana baseball game for the Conference cham pionship. Delegates and speakers disappeared into a special train and headed for Lafayette. The convention never met. The tidal wave rolled on from Philadelphia into Elwood, carrying 235,000 persons with it. It was the largest such gathering ever seen in this co untry. His family, his towns people, his LU. classmates and thousands upon thousands who had no claim of kinship or comradeship were there to hear the first important message of a new-born idol. e f t ~ V, , ; ' ~ f, ~ A member of the board of directors of the Indiana Uni versity Foundation, Willkie is shown above conferring with the other directors at a meeting in Indianapolis last year. Left to right, they are, Uz illclV/urtrie, Ward G. Biddle, Ora L. Wildermuth, President H. B Wells, J. Dwight Peterson, George Heighway, President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan, Hugh McK. Landon and Willkie. Mingling with the weaving thousands that threaded and cross-threaded Elwood were proud members of Indiana University's alumni and undergraduates. Not only was it a great day for Wendell Willkie, but it was a great day for his Alma Mater. From President Emeritus to mere freshman, the University was ~here to greet a favorite son . Dr. Bryan was to give the invocation , at Willkie's request. The "Marching Hundred ," I.U.'s nationally known march ing band, was to lead the Willkie caravan from the high school to Callaway park . Congressman CHARLES A. HAL LECK, AB'22 , who made the nominating speech for Willkie at Philadelphia , made the introuductory speech here. Praying first for "this distracted world," then for "our land," Dr. Bryan concluded: "We pray for this man, upon whom has fallen so great a responsibility-this man whom so many now wish and will to have the place of leadership once held by Wash ington-Jefferson-Lincoln. These makers and guardians of our republic will be at his side for inspiration and coun sel, and along with them a multitude of their comrades known men, unknown men who wrought and fought with them for human freedom. Also about him wiII be a multi tude of living men ready if need be to make the last fight as their fathers made the first fight for a place on earth where men may be safe and free. " They were not stooges, that Elwood audience. They were not strictly partisan. All over town , as 3 o'clock approached,; there was a feeling of challenge, an air of "let's hear what he's got to say." In the downtown section, as the figure of the day was introduced , a listener epitomized the majority viewpoint of the crowd: "Now," he said, "we'll hear if he's worth all this." And a mile away in Callaway park, a serious, subdued Wendell Willkie adjusted his glasses, mopped his perspiring brow, gazed out over seemingly limitless humanity and spoke these words: " We are here today to represent a sacred cause- the preservation of American democracy. . . . Obviously, 1 can not lead this cause alone. I need the help of every Amer 6 1, r During his days at I.U., Willkie was a member of the Extension Debaters of 1916 who, under the direction of the Extension Division, participated in a series of public dis cussions in various towns throughout the State. W illkie is second from the right in the bottom row. His fellow debaters, who held a reunion on the date of the Elwood notification, are: (left to right ) Bottom row-Ralph Thompson, Harlan Yenlte, George F. Dickman, Willkie and Ivan D. Carson. Second row-Ralph Kurtz, Basil Walters , Alvin E. Con· don, George Omacht and Ervin I . Weil. Third row-James M. Cowall , Harry P. Schultz, Guy Cook, Gail H. Beamer, Kenyon Stevenson. Top row-Herman 1'. Briscoe, Back Berman, R. Harris McGuire (deceased) , Emmet Sears and Edward E. Huff man. jcan-Republican, Democrat or Independent-Jew, Catho lic, or Protestant-people of every color, race or creed." Thus spoke a man who believes every word he says, who says every word he believes, a man uncowed by class, sect or mode of authority , a man who, as outstanding student of his graduating law school class, delivered a Commence ment oration branding the Law school faculty hopeless conservatives and urging "much-needed" reforms. Even without the fertilization of national fame, Willkie eventually would have flowered into campus tradition. The seeds he sowed while in Bloomington are of the kind that inevitably grow into legend. Let DONALD 1. SMITH, '19, of Montclair, N. J., one of Willkie at New York's Radio City Music Hall To See. The October 1940 Robert P. Lang and L. E . Sellers, both of South Bend, and George H enler of Bloomington get together at the class of '13 reunion at Elwood to talk over old times. Maurice Bluhm, who roomed with Willkie here at /.U., also was present at the '13-ers reunion at Elwood and is shown above chatting with his classmates. the first to board the Willkie·for-president bandwagon, tell of the advent of the I5·year·old Wendell on the campus: "When Wi1lkie first hit the Indiana campus he was a rip roaring individualist. He was tall and thin and slightly stooped. His black hair grew long and unruly. "He didn' t want a fraternity at first. He started to or· ganize the unorganized, the non-fraternity men, and be· fore we knew it his independents controlled the University's student elections." That was typical. Wherever an argument, a politica l fracas or a division of opinion on any subject existed, Will· kie surveyed the field and jumped in on the weaker side. There was inevitably more fight that way. Willkie's campus years are notable, too, for the growth of debate and his participation in that activity. He was a member of the Extension Debaters in 1916 and toured the State with that group, gaining valuable experience in publi c discussion. Eighteen members of the Extension Debaters squad of 1916 held a reunion in connection with the EI · wood notifica tion . Meeting in Indianapolis for breakfas t on Aug. 17, the group motored to Elwood and had a box lunch before going out to Callaway Park. That evening the whole group had a reunion banquet in the Marott Hotel. Harry P. Shults and Guy Cook were the only two living members of the group pictured on page 6 who were unable to attend. James Engles, who was not in the photograph , attended the reunion, arranged by Ralph Thompson. . . . Himself in Olle of the "Illformation Please" films. Indiana Alumni Magazine The class of '13 also staged a reunion at Elwood and were seated together in a special section for the speech. Willkie's classmates who registered were: Wayne Hamil ton , Edgar R. Curry, Glen W. Warner, O. W. Nichols, D. C. McIntosh , C. W. Gates, Stanley Sowder, Theodore G. Mc· Kesson, M. E. Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hamilton , Mr. and Mrs. George Henley , Mabel Erwin Davis, Bernice Ireland Greger, Mrs. Chester A. Evans, Alcyn Manor Gill. Daniel Lawrence Bock, Charles E. Cook, Charles H. Skin· ner, George C. Ranck, Walter A. Zaugg, Floyd R. Neff, Mer ritt V. Kroft, William Ray Allen, Guy Peters, Mrs. Margaret Benckart Furst, Mr. and Mrs. Heber P. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Cleveland, Rollo K. Mosher, Bertha :May Thornburgh, Mary Nash Hatfield, Raymond Cox, H. Lewis Mauzy, Frank Davidson, Robert P . Lang, O. B. Carmichael, Donald S. Dixon, George A. Schilling, George W. Goble, Albert 1. Wedeking, Ada Burk Bing, Curtis Cleveland, Florence Mellett Scott, Edith Paddock, Ardys Chenoweth Stull, Louise Keller Beaton, Clay A. Phillips, Mrs. Ruby Rutledge Hall , Mrs. Roy Deckard, W. O. Grimes, M. M. Shoemaker, Dr. Chester Stayton, L. E. Sellers, M. L. Bluhm, Dr. Willard E. Givens, Cornelia Ogle Zahn , E. N. Crum and Anna B. Harmon. At one time four of the Willkie family, Wendell, his sis ter JULIA, AB'09, and his brothers FRED, AB'12, and BOB, AB'09, lived in the same house, a wooden building at Third street and Indiana avenue now occupied by Professor K. P. Williams of the Mathematics department. This place be· came a sort of blast fumace where all speeches and argu ments of the liberal and radical campus element were tempered. "You brought your ideas there," says Professor Harmon , " and if they stood up under the beating the Willkies gave them you knew they were sound." Aft~r graduation from Law school , Willkie went into practice at Elwood. The war interrupted this, and he went into the service, becoming a lieutenant of field artillery. While he was in training at Camp Knox, Ky., he and EDITH WILK, ' 12, who had been librarian at Elwood, were married. Mrs. Willkie, too, had attended the University at the same time, but she and Wendell never had met on (Please turn to page 30) ,.. 4 Paul McNutt~ the Sensation Of the Chicago Convention Prolonged and Unexpected Demonstration for I.U. Alumnus Was the Highlight of the Democratic Convention By Rohert E. Barton Allen "III the first place . .." O LDTlMERS in the political world could not promise much excitement for the 1940 Democratic convention III Chicago. It would be "Cut 'n dried," the y said . The Presid ent would be re·nominated for a third term ; his every wish would be observed in the platform which would fol· low closel y the seven-year New Deal ideol ogy ; and that would be all there was to it. Of co urse there was always the remote possibility that the President mi ght refuse " to run" or "to be drafted"; but it was not likely. The inner circle had made it pretty definite. Itwas 1I0t worth a hot trip to the Windy City and the buffeting of a conventi on crowd if yo u were hunt ing excitement. Yet some 40,000 delegates, observers, political hangers·on , and mildly curious jammed the great convention hall at one time or another to see the show. At times the great hall was more than half·empty. At other times meetings were dismissed as soon as they were called. The manage ment was finding it difficult to keep the convention going until the Chicago h otels, taxicabs, and restaurants had recovered the amoullt of their generous gift to the con venti on fund. At last a ripple of drama and suspense ran through the del egations. The President had made arrangements for a well·chosen spokesman to carry his decision to the dele gates. The hall was crowded. Senator Barkley, badly abus· in g the King's English in which the note was couched and for which the President is so justly famous, conveyed the idea that Mr. Roosevelt would prefer to leave the White" H ouse for the simple and priv ate life of Hyde Park. But the gate was left wide aj ar. It was definite now that the President would be re-n ominated. Man y delegates and spectators left for their down-town hotels where more excite· ment might be found. Many others left for home. The demonstrations for the third·time nominee were genuin e ; the y were for th e man that the convention, by and large, wanted as its standard·bearer. They were not the wild emotional outbursts characteristic of Democratic conven ti ons. The results had been too long expected, too long taken for granted. 8 With the big show over, th e convention tightened its belt and prepared for the side show , which this time mi ght be the more spec tacular . It was generally felt that the se lecti on of the vice·presidential nominee would be a wide open fi ght, the sort of thing which ha s made the Democr atic conventi ons famous and h as kept the democrac y m Democ ratic. Various candidates looked sharply to their fences. I t was agreed in the hotels and the lobbies that the men to watch were Justice William O. Douglas, Senator Barkley of Kentuck y, Sen ator Bankhead of Ala bama , Sena tor Byrnes of South Carolina , Senator Lucas of Illin ois, Governor Stark of Missouri , Representative Rayburn of Texas, Secretary of Agriculture Wallace of I owa, and So· cial Security Administrator PAUL V. McNUTT, AB'13, Hon LLD'33, of Indiana. The bo ys who pulled your sleev e in the lobby to whisper they "had just found out" told you that it would be William O. Dougl as. Nominations for the vice·presidency were to take place at the Friday evening session. The ba rs were down. The President had accepted the third·term draft. His gracious wife was on her way to speak to the conventi on. Every man wh o had been born with the desire to be vice·president was now on his own. Greatest activity was seen about the Alabama headquarters and the palati al suite of the Indiana delegation in the Stevens Hotel. It was rumored that Harry Hopkins was workin g quietly but effectively-no one was sure quite for whom. During the afternoon lull, delegates and observers milled about in the hotels and on the streets. They went fr om one candidate's headquarters to an other. Almost without exception the headquarters were ordinar y hotel suites with a secretary at the door. Unless your face or name were known to this Cerberus, you were not admitted. The can didate was out. She did not kn ow when he would return. She would be glad to take your n ame. But there was one ex cepti on to this rule. It was the Indiana Headquarters in the Boulevard Room of th e Stevens Hotel. There were no d oors to close. The g reat archwa ys were wide, gaily decorated, inviting. Members of the Indiana Committee met you , welcomed you, asked The October 1940 Always active in I.U. alumni affairs, McNutt has been th e main speaker a·t mal/.y banquets. Above he is shown at the speakers' table at the alumni meeting held ill St. Louis last sprin g. At his left is President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan. what the y might do for you. Great pictures of Paul Mc Nutt smiled down upon you. A string ensemble made up of neat, snappily dressed college boys played popular tune5. As a college professor and two Indiana Un iversity mem bers of the Jackson club appeared in the door, the ensemble left off in the middle of the "Beer Barrel Polka" to play "Indiana, Our Indiana." The three or four hundred visi tors in the room, many graduates of the University, ap plauded the song. There was a spirit here in the Indian a headquarters of cheerfulness, of optimism, of business efficiency. People liked to congregate here. One co uld overhear a Texas drawl say, "This is the way a co nvention ought to be run." A Boston broad-"A" replied, "This hea d quarters is the only efficient thing I have seen at the con vention." That was the general reaction. Suddenly there was a roar of applause. Every one stood on tiptoe. McNutt with a small group of advisers swept through the lobby. He was bowing and waving. He seemed satisfied. Then the news began to leak out. Arizona dele gates had come over to urge Indiana to take Arizona's place on the roll call so that McNutt might be nominated early. Only Alabama's Bankhead would precede him . Then there had been a meeting of eleven of the Western States in which two-thirds or more of their votes h ad been pledged to the Administrator. Oklahoma and sever al E astern States had promised their entire delegati on. The ski es were bright in the Boulevard Room of the Stevens Hotel at three o'clock on Friday afternoon . Then came the rains . There were telephone calls fr om the White House . The President had "picked" his runnin g mate_ The vice-presidency was not to be a wide open fight. Mr. Rooseevlt was said to have made Wallace's selecti on the condition of hi s own acceptance. A hush fell over the Boulevard Room . The news went slowly, even tearfull y around. " Paul could ha ve had it, too," was heard on all hands. "We won't give in like that," sa id others. "We'll fight it out on the co nve nti on floor. " But soon th e word came from McNutt him self. "Call it off boys. Let's be good soldiers and support the President. He is my co mmander in-chief." Most of the Indiana backers left the hotel, th e convention, and even Chicago. They went so rrowfully and Indiana Alumni Magazine angrily home. " It might have been! " Those who remained went half-heartedl y to the conventi on hall to hear the Sec retary of Ag riculture nomina ted . McNutt's name had been withdrawn; it would not be placed before the assembly. When the roll call bega n, the name of Senator William Bankhead was first to be pla ced in nomination. Even be fore the speaker had closed his address the Alabama dele ga tes, foll owed by most of their brethren south of the Maso n-Dix on Line, were sweeping into the aisle. A sense of drama began to be felt. Was the solid South in revolt against the President's wishes? The demonstrations con tinued for 20 minutes. The Bankhead group represented a powerful minority. Were all of these delegates 5upporting Bankhead, or were they protesting Wallace, was asked up and down in th e galleries. The secon ding speeches droned on. The delegates and galleries smoked, buzzed, and drank thousands of bottles of pop. Everyone was bored. It was a set show and not a very excltll1g one. Convention leaders were trying des perately to hurry the nomination through before the large anti-Wallace block could gain further power. And then Delaware gave way to Oklahoma. A vigorous young man by the name of Don Wells, speaker of the H ouse of Okl a homa, fairly bounced to the microphone. There was de cisi on and command in his actions and his voice. An imm e diate hush fell in the hall. "The man I am about to nomi nate is not the choice of the professional politicians" but he was drowned out by the roar of approval fr om the floor and galleries. "My candidate is the ch oic e of the rank and file of the American people"-and again hi s voice was lost in the roar of approval. At this time few people in the hall knew whom Speaker Wells was about to nominate; but the y did approve hi s statements. "My man is Paul V. McNutt. . . ." At the mention of McN utt's name pandemonium broke loose. Oklahoma 's delegates were in the aisle; California and Texas were following ; Connecticut was out, then P enn sylvania, Ohio , New York , Colorad o. Indian a's delegates, under strong instructions fr om their chief, sa t ti ght until 19 other states were in the aisle. 21,000 people were in the (Please turn to page 30) 9 ExaBlining: Training for Business At Indiana University Fastest-Growing School in Indiana University Now Housed in New Building-97 Per Cent of 1940 Graduates Find Jobs T HERE are doubtless some academic people who think that it is no part of the true function of a college or uni versity to provide for its students courses in business. There are als0 some businessmen who sincerely believe that a college education is neither im portant nor desirable for one who ex pects to enter the field of business. Fortunately, I think, people of both types are becoming more and more rare. If business in the future operates more successfully, solves its problems more efficiently, than it has in the past, the improvement will be due in part, at least, to the fact that the average busi ness man will be better educated than his predecessor; and part of that better education will have been provided by our colleges and universities. Other things being equal, the col lege-trained man will be a better man in business, just as in teaching, or the law, or the ministry , or any other oc- By Chauncey Sanders Tenth ,:n Il series 0/ articles on d,:j jeren! deparlmellts 0/ JIldiana U Iliversity. Dean Arthur Weimer. cupation one cares to mention. At Indiana University we have for many years believed in educating young men and young women for those occu pations that are commonly lumped to gether as "business." As long ago as 1902 there was a two-year commercial course; in 1919 provision was made for a four-year course in commerce. In 1920 there was established a School of Commerce and Finance, the name of which changed, in 1933, to the School of Business Administration, and in 1938, to the School of Business. When Dean Arthur Weimer came last year to head the School of Business, he found a school that had grown and thrived under the leadership of Deans William A. Rawles and Herman B Wells and Acting Dean C. W. Barker. Indeed , it had already outgrown its quarters, a building erected in 1923; fortunately , a new building was provided for and, completed during the past summer, is now in use. The new building-- officially named the Business and Economics Building, since it is shared by the School of Business and the Department of Eco nomics-contains 27 classrooms. Some of these are small seminar rooms, de signed to fit the needs of classes with 12-15 students; others are lecture rooms seating as many as 435 persons. In addition to the classrooms, there are more than 30 offices, a number sufficient to provide adequate work space for instructors and graduate as sistants. Two statistical laboratories are equipped with modern machines to meet the needs of both beginning and ad vanced students. Other statistical ma chines, housed in a room on the first floor of the building, are available for use by the entire faculty of the Ulliver sity. Two classrooms are especially equipped to handle the work in secre tarial training. A student lounge on the first floor is available for general use by the student body and for meet ings of student organizations. The most delightful room in the en lire building is the new library reading room, which seats 200 students and provides highly desirable study and reading facilities. Two rooms, the Rawles Memorial Room, which adjoins the main readin g room of the library , and the facultv reading room are not yet equipped. Beaut£ful new home of School of Business at l.U. 10 The October 1940 The School of Business is fortunate indeed in havin g such a physical plant as this new building; much more im portant and more fortunate is the fact that it also has the men to make the best possible lise of that building_ Dean Weimer , who has the AB degree from Beloit College and the AM alld PhD de g rees from the U nivers ity of Chicago, came to Jndiana after experience with lhe Federal H ousing Administration and teaching at Georgia Tech_ In such time as his man y oth er duties allow him, he keeps up his research activity. Other members of the faculty of the School of Busi ness and the Depart Inent of Econ omics also maintain re search interests in addition to lheir other work. Among these are some who have co ntributed to the growth of the School througho ut a number of years. Special mention should be made of Dr. James E. Moffat, Profes sors A. L. Pri ckett, C. W. Barker, George W. Starr, Haro ld Lusk, Mark Mills, and R. M. Mikesell. In more recent years a number of new faculty members have been added to the staff, many of whom are rapid ly achieving national prominence. No table among these are Dr. Harry C. Sauvain, Dr. N. L. Silverstein. Dr. George W. Steiner and Professo;· Ed ward E. Edwards in finance; Dr. Al bert Haring, Dr. M. L. Anshell, and Dr. J. E. Gates in marketin g; Dr. I. W. AIm, Dr. Robert E. Walden, and Pro fessors D. Lyle Dieterle, Geoffrey Carmichael and Stanley Pressler in a~ co unting; Dr. J . Edward H edges and Dr. Alfred Manes in insurance; and The late Dean William A. Rawles was dealt from 1920 to 1933 . Indiana Alumni Magazine R esearch students conferring with Dean Weimer ill one of the seminar rooms. Dr. Carroll L. Christianson and Profes sors Cleveland and ·MacIntyre III Economics. An adequate program of training for modern business requires more, how ever , than teachin g and research ac tiviti es on the part of the faculty . Con siderable emphasis has been thrown in recent years upon student guidance and upon the placing of graduates in de sirable positions. Student guidance in the Indian a University School of Busi ness has been developed largely through the efforts of Mr. Richard C. Murra y, Assistant to Dean Weimer; also involved is a far-reaching facult y ad visory system . The placement activities of the School have been carried on since the fall of 1939 by Professor John F. Mee, Direc tor of the Personnel and Placement Bu reau and Assistant Professor of Man agement. The efficiency of the Place ment Burea u is demonstrated by the fact that more than 97% of the grad uates of th e 1940 class were placed in desirable positions within three months after graduation . Also, so me 50 alumni from as far back as 1920 were placed cluring the past academic year. The developm en t of the guidance program began in 1937 with the crea tion of the office of assistant to the dean; the holder of the new position was to be charged with the responsibil it)' of providin g individual guidance for freshman and sophomore students. I n addition a fa cult y member in each field of co ncentrati on was selected to serve as the advisor Jor junior and senior students in hi s fi eld. During the past two years additional student personnel service has been de veloped to help the student discover his major abilities and aptitudes, to ac· quaint him with the various vocation", and to enable him to ch oose intelli ge nt ly his vocational field. Guidance serv ices are at the same time to help the student in attainin g hi s maximum effec liv eness in the University by clarifying his objectives, improvin g his study methods, planning his course of study, and developing ill him th ose qualities of character and personality essen tial to s uccess in business . Upon entering the University each freshman is assigned to a faculty ad viser under the direction of the Univer sity Student Guidance Divisi on. Each President Herman B Wells was d ealt from 19.33 to 1937. 11 Dean Weimer inspecting one of the Thomas Hart Benton murals in the lecture auditorium of the new building. adviser has under his direction a small group of students with whom he be comes well acquainted. All of these students are encouraged to consult their adviser about scholastic or personal problems, and about anything else they please. As long as the student main tains satisfactory work in his courses such conferences are voluntary; but he is required to confer with his ad viser whenever his work in any of his courses falls below passing. Such con ferences frequently locate the cause of the failure and enable the student to repair the mischief in time to achieve a passing grade for the semester. Accumulative reco rds of significant academic and personal information concerning each student are maintained in the School of Business beginning with his enrollment in the University and continuing down to and beyond his graduation. These records are avail able to guidance officers and counsel lors at all times. The information con cerning a student which is accumulated during his undergraduate years enables the placement director to advise the student concerning a vocation and also to furnish perhaps vitally significant information to prospective employers. It occurs to me now that I have said a good deal about how the School of Business fun ctions without much elll phasis thus far 011 what the School is trying to do and why. The statement drawn up by the faculty of the School of Business last spring for inclusion in the current University Catalogue tells the story better than J can: 12 "The dynamic economic changes of recent decades have placed a heavy responsibility on those who direct and operate the manifold activities of the business world. To help in carrying these responsibilities, business has made steadily increasing demands for well trained young peop:e, and university education for I::usiness has expanded to fulfill these needs. The rapidity of such expansion is illustrated by the tripling of the number of students en rolled in the Indiana University School of Business in less than a decade. "The increasing extent to which busi ness executives look to Indiana Univer sity for well-trained young men and women demonstrates the effectiveness of the University's program designed to equip students for active participation in the business world. Such training is not a substitute for actual business ex perience; it is intended rather to pro vide the equipment with which experi ence in business can be converted rapid ly and effectively into useful abilities. "The major teaching objective of the Indiana University School of Business is the training of students for effec tive participation in business activities and for responsible membership in the modern communities of which they will become a part. "Such a program requires, first of all, a mastery of basic business tech niques and methods. It calls for profi ciency in analytical skills as well as for the development of those personal qualities essential to business success and leadership. Finally , and of no less importance, It IS necessary for the stu dent to acquire an understanding of the relationship of business to other aspects of modern life and to equip himself for responsible functioning in the role of citizenship. "Certain kinds of business activities are technical and professional in char acter, while others are more general. The program of the School of Business has been developed so as to meet the requirements of both kinds of activities. Thus the student is able either to fol low a specialized and professional course of study or to acquire a general knowledge of business methods and principles. These specialized phases of business activity now represent the most challenging and at the same time the most rapidly growing of all the profes sIons. "Approximately one-half of the typical four-year course of study in the School consists of work pertaining di rectly to the general field of business Professor George Starr, director oj the bureau of business research. and to the student's special field of concentration. The other half is com posed of general cultural studies-liter ary, scientific , historical and social. C;aduate study is concerned chiefly with specialized professional training. "The fr eshman and sophomore years are devoted mainly to basi c cultural, technical , and scientific co urses such as English , accounting, economi cs, so ciology, government, geography, and psychology , which are considered of fUIldamental importance to all persons entering business. During the junior and senior years, students continue into the more specialized professional work. "Junior courses in marketing, money and banking, corporation finance , sta tistics, and business law are required of all students. The wide variety of other advanced courses offered allows the student to specialize in a single field , such as banking and finance, ac merchandising, co unting, statIstIcs, mallagement, insurance, real estate and land economics, public business ad ministration, secretarial training, com mercial teaching or other branches. A student who does not wish to specialize may work out a more general program of study with his adviser. "Professiollal business training, like other professional training, must pro vide for a careful selection of those young men and women who have the necessary attributes of ability and per sonality, and who have demonstrated their ability to carry forward work of a high quality. Ordinarily this se lection is undertaken at the beginning (Please turn to page 31) T he October 1940 University Since June RESHMEN entering the University this fall found a more complete program of student gUldance, four !lew dormito:'ies and more adequate classroom facilities than enjoyed bv previous new students. Not only did they find these physical evidences of the Greater LU. movement, but they also found a student body that Look just pride in the advances made. The student guidance program, su pervised by Dr. Herman T. Briscoe, aims to speed the adjustment of the new students to the campus. The fresh men were encouraged to "feel at home" here and were assured of advice and assistance in their academic work. F From Freshman to Senior In Three Days Time! From freshman to senior in three days! That's the record of Walter West, 26-year-old pianist who entered the School of Music last month. Walter West , '41. Condensed from The Indiana Daily Student By James D. Thompsoll, '42 After three days on the campus, West had passed examinations covering freshman, sophomore and junior courses, and was ready to tackle his senior year. The New Haven, Conn., musician at tended high school for two years, then studied music for three and gave con certs for another. He expects to re ceive the BM degree in Oct., 1941. surroundings, because 19 departments and divisiol1s were occupying larger quarters. The opening of new Swain Hall, which houses the departments of as tronomy, math ematics and physics, and of the Business and Economics build ing, paved the way for many depart ments whi ch formerly occupied tem porary structures to be moved into permanent headq uarters. Four new dormitories, two each for men and co-eds, were opened, easing the housing problem . Only unit on the University's current building pro gram yet to be completed is the Music Hall-Auditorium , which is expected to be ready for use by January . Students Give Thanks For Thanksgiving Already students are thanks-giving over a scheduled four-day Thanksgiving vacation, from Nov. 20 to 25, that will enable them to eat their turkey and trimmings at home this year. When President Roosevelt changed the date of Thanksgiving last year, events already scheduled prohibited more than a one-day holiday, but the Board of Trustees restored the vaca tion to its former length this fall. With the Indiana-Purdue football game set for Nov. 23, rooters will trek from home, rather than from the cam pus, to witness the classic at Lafayette. More "New Blood" Added to Faculty Nation's Best Driver Enrolls at I.U. Nine new fa culty members with pro fessorial ranking have been added to the LU. teaching staff this year. The new faculty members are: Major Howard F. K. Cahill, assistant profes sor of military science and tactics: Harry G_ Day, assistant professor of chemistry; James E. Gates, acting as sistant p'rofessor of business; Miss Ora Hyde, assistant professor of music; J . Edward Hedges, assistant professor of insurance; Edwin Kime, professor of anatomy; Leland McLung, assistant professor of bacteriology; Francis E. Mcintyre, assistant professor of eco nomics, and Raymond E. Zirkle, profes sor of botany_ Scores of other appointments affected every department of the university. Gene Kenard, winner of a $5,000 scholarship which was the first prize in the national driving contest sponsored Gene Kenard, '44. Nineteen Divisions Enjoy More Space, New Facilities When the faculty rolled its sleeves up and set to work Sept. 16, they did so in more convenient and adequate Indiana Alumni Il'lngazine 1.'3 b), the Ford Motor Company at the New York World 's Fair, selected Indi· ana University above all other univer· sities in the United States for his col· legiate tra ll1111g. The Evansville youth took driving lessons in Bosse High School and won over 47 other state winners at New York. He plans to major in geology at LU. Students Escape Draft Until Next June J.U. men students co llectively sighed with relief when the Conscription act, passed Sept. 16, included a clause de· ferring military service of college stu· dents until the end of the 1940·41 school year. The bill requires that more than 1,600 students and fa culty member;; between the ages of 21 and 35 register Oct. 16, but provisions have been made for them, if drafted, to postpone servo ice until school ends next Jun e. War to be Discllssed by Paris Correspondent Students will hear a first·hand de· scription of World War II when Ken· neth T. Downs, manager of the Paris bureau of Jnternational News service, speaks here Oct. 2, under the sponsor· ship of the Department of Journalism. New Men Students Attend Annual Welcome Banquet Prominent Speakers on Convo Schedule The 1940·41 Convocation series off to a flying start last month promises to maintain the pace with prominent personages scheduled speak here during October. Gubernatorial candidates Glen lis, LLB'25, and Lt. Gov. Henry Schrick· er will be this month's first speakers , followed by artist·author Rockwell Kent, Luther Evans of the Library of Congress, and Josephine Roche, pres i· dent of the National Consumers' League. Professor Fowler Harper of the School of Law, rece ntly returned after a year as general co unsel to the Fed· eral Security Administration in Wash· ington, D.C. , and Col. Thomas Tchou , former private secretary to Chiang Kai· shek, spoke to capacity audiences in September. got and fiv e to Hil· Gathered for the fourth annual Fresh· man Welcome Banquet, sponsored on Sept. 23 by the Indiana Men's Union, new men students celebrated their en· trance into the University. W. Glenn Thompson, AB'22, deliv· ered the keynote address of the eve· New men students entering the University this fall were officially welcomed into 1.U. life at the fourth annual welcoming banquet sponsored by the Indiana Union on S ept. 23 in Alumni Hall. Friendliness was the keynote of the evening's program. ning entitled " Indiana University and What it Offers Lo Freshmen." Campus personalities who addressed th e group were Dr. Herman T. Briscoe, AB'17, AM '23, PhD'24, dean of fac· ulties; William Lowe Bryan, president emeritus of the University; Coach A. N. (Bo) McMillin , and J. E. Patrick, '30, director of the Indiana Men'3 Union. Marvin Miller, '41, Union board member, was toastmaster. McNutt, Norman Thomas On Open Forum Schedule Taking advantage of campai gn year, the Jndiana Men's Union outlined an Open Forum program designed to edu· cate students on the value and use of their voting privileges. As this Magazine goes to press, final details have not been announced, but Norman Thomas, once again nominee for presidency on the Socialist ticket, will speak here Oct. 16, and definite assurance has been given that Paul V. McNutt, '13, Hon LLD'33 , and one speaker from the Republican head· quarters will speak here before the eleo:: · tion in November. Fath er William C. Kernan , news commentator, opened the series on Sept. 26 with a discussion on " The At· tack of Isms on American Democracy." University Theatre Faces Busy Month A busy month is scheduled for Uni· versity Theatre casts, with tw o plays to be presented during the first half of October. Nota Scholl and George Strother, both PG, will play the leading roles in " Outward Bound," scheduled for Oct. 9 and 10, and at press time, tryouts were being held to select a cast for " What a Life," to run Oct. 1.3·15. Other plays to be produced during the year include " Ah, Wilderness," " Family POltrait," the " Jordan River Revue," and two scripts to he an· nounced later. Students Spent $643.22 .Each Last Year One yea r's s(;hooling at Indiana Uni· versity costs $643 .22, according to a composite average, based on a survey by Miss Mary Crawford of the De· partment of Economics, for the 1939·40 5(; hool year. This was an increase of $23 .85, for th e average stud ent, over the figure for 1938·39, which Miss Crawford at· tributed to "an increase in funds that th e student had to spend rather than 14 The October 1940 to ani ncrease III costs." Co·ed expenses averaged $63.67 high. er than men's; organized students spent from $210 to $293 more than inde· pendent men and women. One of every three persons included in the survey earned at least part of his expenses. Summer Session Students Enjoy Activities Summer Session students found a full program of activities scheduled for their education and diversion during their nine·week stay on the camp liS. In addition to four productions bv the new Summer Stock Theatre, con· certs, lectures, exhibits, dances and tours of local industries and near·by State parks gave the students relaxa· tioll and entertainment throughout. Because the majority of activitie~ were included in tuition fees, every stu· dent was able to participate freely in the program. Each student also reo ceived a copy of the Indiana Summer Student , a twi ce·a·week summer edition of the Indiana Daily Student. Summer Stock Theatre I s Big Success Enthusiastic audiences acclaimed the first LU. Summer Stock Theatre that staged four plays here on the campus Ihis summer. The program was so well received that plans are being made to make it an ann ual feature. Maryel Patrick Crowned Summer Prom Queen Foremost social event of the Sum· lIIer Session was the first Summer Prom, when 130 couples danced under the stars and a soft July moon on the terrace of the Union Building. Twice·crowned Arbutus Be aut y Queen , Maryel Patrick, BPSM'40, added to her list of triumphs the title of Sum· mer Prom Queen-the first in history. She also appeared on the cover of the May issue of the Alrunni Magazine. I.U. Educated 16,910 During 1939-40 Year A total of 16,910 different persons furthered their education through the University during the 1939-40 aca· demic year which ended Aug. 24 with the closing of the Summer Session. Of that number, 8,168 were enrolled in residence work on the Bloomington or IIId ianapolis campi; 8,742 others took correspondence or part time work at Extension centers. Indiana Alumni Magazine One of the most popular of the 43 I .U. exhibits in the University Building at the Indiana State Fair this fall was the alumni exhibit which featured a limestone tribute to classmates, Wendell W illkie and Paul V. McNutt, and an attractive lay· out on the Magazine and the Alumni Association. More than 100,000 persons saw the exhibits. Conventions Bring 10,000 To Campus During Year Reflectin g the University's growing importance as a convention center, more than a dozen conferences held here during the summer drew 2,000 men and women from Indiana and sur· rounding states. Leaders from every field of endeavor, 8,700 strong, attended conventions on the campus during the first two se mesters of the 1939-40 year, to brin g the total attendance figure for the en tire year well above the 10,000 mark. The summer conferences ranged i:1 types all the way from a Life Offi cers I nvestment Seminar to one for School Physicians, and included a WPA con vention which ran for three weeks. Plans Being Made For Homecoming As the Magazine went to press plans were being made for the Homecoming program on Oct. 18-19 in connection with the Iowa-Indiana football game. As in past. years the Powwow will be held on Friday ni ght, an alumni luncheon in Alumni Hall before the game and an "open house" for alumni will be held in the lounges in the Union Building after the game. The Band Benefit ball and special decorations for Homeco ming will be added features of the program that an nually draws thousands of alumni back to I.u. Sigma Delta Chi Starts Loan Fund The creation of a loan fund for j our nalism students was announced by the University chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism fra ternity , late in September. The journalism fraternit y also is working on plans for the creation of a Don Mellett Memorial Fellowship Fund in honor of the late Don Mellett, '13, one of the great martyrs of American journalism who was murdered in 1926 by Canton, Ohio, gangsters who did not approve of Mellett's "clean up" edi torial campaign. The fellowships would provide graduate study in the Depart ment of Journalism, one of the few departments in the University that has 110 fellowships at the present time. 15 The Hustling Hoosiers • Uncertainty Shrouds I.U. Football Hopes This Year As Both Squad and Schedule Will Be Tougher Than in '39 • PORTSWRlTERS in the Midwest are now engaged in a j ournalistic debate on the question: " Is I n diana a definite threat for the West ern Conference championship?" The dehate has been going on ever since Bo called the boys out for practice on Sept- 10. The decision will be ren dered in ei ght weekly installments, the first on Oct- .5 when J.U. plays host to Texas. Each side has four majol points in its argument on the question; both sides seem to have logical grounds for th eir contentions, but in football logic doesn ' t seem to mean very much. S 22 Veterans Are On Hand The affirmative leads off hy proudly pointing to the 22 veterans Bo has on hand around which to build his team . Sixteen of these men are seniors with two years of Big Ten experience under their belts. Football: Oct. S-Texa s 12-Nebrask a 19-1owa (Homecoming) 26-- No rl hwestern Nov. 2-0hio Slate .... ... . 9-Michigan Stal e 16--W iscomill 23-Pnrdue here there here ther e there here there th ere men who were able to win only three out of ten Conference games in the pa5t two seasons. What reason is there to believe that they will accomplish this year what they were unable to do in the past? so reasons the negative. Speedy Sophomores Bolster Hopes I n addition to the veterans, the af firmative points out, there is a new OCI. S-P urdu!' Ih ere crop of speedy sophomores to give the .... here 19-10wa 2S-Michigan Slate .... ..... .. ...... here missing zip to the Hoosier attack. there No v. 2·- 0hio Sta te Earl Dolaway, Bob White, Patsy 9-Bi g Ten Meet ...... ... At Purdue 16 or 18--NCAA ... ..... At Michigan State Ronzone and Dale Swihart are the first 25- Natinnal AAU At Detroit year men who have b een looking good in early practice sessions. Cross-Country: Same Key Men Back As in '38 and '39 Team Lacks .4 Proved Triple-Threat Back The negative scornfully points out that these veterans-the ke y men in the "s uccess plans of '40"-are the same The scoffers continue their running down of Indiana's chances by pointing out that there is 110 tried and proved triple-threat back on J.V. squad. Hursh can pass and kick, McGuire can pass alJd run , Brooks and Tofil can run, but none has shown the ability to run, pass and kick effectively against Bi g Nine competition. Perhaps one of the sophomores might develop into a triple-threater , but the non-believers point out that few sophomores star under Ho's system. Hursh , Dolaway, i\llcGuire-Plellty of Kick! Bo Has Plenty Of Material Again the wishful thinkers turn to the size of the Hoosier squad, which Bv calls the best-rounded squad he has had since coming to l.V. Annually weak in man-power, In diana has men in sufficient numbers this year so that suitable reserves might be developed for emergency use. 16 The October 1940 Lots of Quantity, Not Much Quality Indiana has a lot of men, moa ns the nega tive's rebuttal , but it does not have a lot of good men. They point out that on th e eve of the opening ga me there are still three or four men battling for the starting backfield positions, with no four backs show ing a decided superior ity. Too, they point out, the slowness of the Indiana secondary defense has not been speeded up , unless J.U. fate is to be in sophomore hand s. Schedule Calls For Less Travelling Last year Indiana's team spent more time on trains than the average pull man porter, but this year Bo's boys have a break in the schedule. The long est trip is 730 miles-to Nebraska. Three games-with Texas, Iowa and Spanky Gahm, senior center, bragged about his conditioning this summer-golf· Michigan State-will be played at home Gene White and Cobb Lewis give him the razz as he drives a neat piece of ozone. and four other games-with Northwest ern , Ohio State, Wisconsin and Purdue seniors gone) have 13 lettermen on Injuries Ham per - all are short trips. hand plus the greatest sophomores in Early Practice history. Injuries, not the kind that bench a Less Distance, man for the season but rather the kind But Faster! Only Time Will Tell that keep him from rounding into shape, Indiana ma y not have to travel as have hit hard at Indiana this year. What Score Will Be far for its 1940 games, co ncludes the One veteran, Eddie Herbert, has been Frankly , we don ' t know what to tell negative, but they will have to travel a lot faster if the Hoosiers are to win you about football prospects. It may lost for the season because of a torn be a great year and then again it may ca rtila ge in his knee. He plans to with many of those tough eight games. draw from school and return next year not be so great. With the exception of Purdue, all of Indiana's opponents escaped with lit But in any case, Indiana will have a and play with the '41 team. Tuffy Brooks, Cobb Lewis, Hal tle or no loss of veterans by gradua hustling, battling eleven that will push tion , and even the Boilermakers (26 all eight teams to the limit. Hursh and Gene White all were out of The same men who gave Indiana a successful cross-country season last fall are back for action again this year. Lef" to right : Bob Barter, Del Persillger, Gerry Daniels, Ed Hedges , Campbell Kalle, Wayne Tolliver, Vernoll Broertjes alld {I eryl McKibbon . The harriers open their season at Purdue on Oct. S. 1 Indiana Alumni Magazine 17 uniform with bruises when Bo sent his charges through thei r last scrimmage game on Sept. 23 in Mem orial Stadium. All but Brooks should be ready for the opening game against Texa s, and Tuffy probably will be ready by the Iowa game. Without Crain, Texas Wins, 39-7 .lack (Rabbit ) Crain, sensational broken ·field runner of the Texas Long. horns, was hurt in the opening game (Igainst Colorado, but his mates rolled up a 39·7 score against the champions of the Big Seven Conference. Crain hurt his hip, but is expected to be ready to play against Indiana on Ocl. 5. Evidently there is more to the Texas attack than Crain, for th e Long· horns gained 539 yards without him. Cross-Country Prospects Bright Partially eclipsed in cross·co untry last yenr by great teams from Wisconsin and Mi chigan State, Indian a should once more reign supreme in the hill and dale sport for the 12th time in the last 13 years. Over the past twelve years, Indiana has won 52 out of 56 dual meets and lost the Big Ten title to Wis consin last year for the first time since 1923. Reasons for optimism at LU. are seven veterans returning-the sam e men who ran last year-and a good crop of sophomores_ Several of the veterans have shown marked improvement since last fall , notably Kane and Tolliver. Michigan State, NCAA champs, and Wisconsin, Big Ten title-holders, both suffered losses by graduation. ~ Living Fred Cornell, First 1. U. Quarterback, Still Active and Interested in Sports By H. O. Slechan, '01 Were an "i ntelligence test" instituted on the Indiana Campus today and the question asked: "Who was Indiana's first great quarterback?" it is doubt ful if many could name him, so fragile is the fle~ting thing called fame. That distinction belongs to Fred D. Cornell, '90, a hale and hearty young ster in his mid-seventies, now living in retirement in Los Angeles. It was ill 1387 that he blazed the way for th e Johnny Fosters, "Co tton" Berndts, Chuck' Bennetts, Vernon Huffmans, Corby Davises and the rest of the val iant Hoosier crew that have since won renown on the gridiron. In the decade before the turn of the century , Fred Cornell was also an out standing baseball player. Those wer~ the days when they played "big league" ball on the LU. campus. Cornell was the star pitcher of the team. In fact he was so good that he was induced to complete his education at Ithaca (N .Y. ) where Cornell University-the same as his own name--is located, that he might fling the rawhide for the Em pire State college "champs." As Fred Cornell explains, it was no discredit in those days for an athlete to have his legitimate expenses defrayed by the school-if he was a bonafide student. And he still believes that it is all right and the means for helping a lot of youngsters get a higher edu cation. But he wants it understood that he does not approve of hirin g up to a promise they made each other 20 years ago, the five regulars oj Indiana's 1920 basketball team got together with their families for a reunion this summer. Left to right, Arlo Byrum, executive secretary of the University Y.M.C.A., Cleveland; A. L. Phillips , basketball coach at Ball State; Everett S. Dean, basket ball coach at Stanford University; Urban Ieffries, superintendent of schools at Charleston, Ill., and Heber Williams, Indianapolis businessman. Comell being interviewed by Stechan (right) at Los Angeles . athletes simply for their athletic prowess. He feels that a system could be worked out by colleges today, whi ch would be an advantage all around, if honestly and fairly administered. On finishing up at Cornell, Fred responded to the call of the West and loca ted in Omaha, Nebraska, where he was employed for many years by the Southern Pacific Railway . Masonry was his avocation and he finally de voted himself to fraternal work, moving to Lincoln. There he was recorder of the Shrine Temple and finally elected to the 33rd Degree-the highest honor ill Masonry for hi s outstanding Masonic work. Several years ago, Fred Cornell came to Los Angeles on a visit and decided to remain here. The years have not obsessed him in any way. "I'm not living in the past," he says. He takes a deep interest in everything that's going on and refuses to see mulli-grubs ill the future. While making no pre tensions to being a prophet, Cornell believes the future will take care of itse lf. " Meanwhile, I'm having the time of my life, right now," says Indiana's first great quarterback and his beam ing smile and good-nature prove it. Read About Bo in Ladies' Home Journal 4 The Bo McMilJins to be the sub ject of the "Ho w Amenca Lives" series in the November iss ue of the Ladies' Home Ioumal. 18 T he October 1940 Guido Stempel Is Retired, But As Active As Ever Professor Emeritus of Comparative Philology for 44 Years, This Youthful Veteran I(eeps Working for the Fun of It HEN is a professor "emeritus" and when is he only "retired"? That, ] felt, was first to be learned if I would write of the men and wom ell who, after years of service to ]n diana University, now are listed in LU. Catalog under "Emeritus Officers and Professors_" F or an answer to this question to whom would it be more natural to go than to Guido Hermann Stempel, AM '11 , 44 years a teacher of English and comparative philology at LU. and now a member of the class of '38- retired. H e was found in his study: that study in his home on Park Street at First with the spacious yard and colorful flower garden, which for almost half a century has been the mecca of the inquiring stu dent. ]n this study, with word-books to the right of him , word-books to the left of him, this kindly , erudite philolo gist offered to illuminate the words for which I sought a fine distinc ti on_ " Emeritus," said Professor Stempel, "is from the root emereo and expresses merit or approbation." "A Roman root? " I inquired. " Yes," he returned, "it was a name applied to a Roman soldi er who had served his time and was honorably dis charged. " "Would it not be interesting to trace this word, emereo, through Latin litera ture and learn if there was any cere mony attending an act so significant to the soldier as that of retiring from ac tive service?" ] asked Mr. Stempel. "It surely would be," he repli ed and promised to " run down" this word to its complete m eaning. The chore in exploring this word, Professor Stempel, always a creative scholar, would take in his stride, for he is now in the center of what seems to the uninitiated a staggering task-that of bringing a standard, popular diction ary of a few years ago up-to-date; a W . 1ndiana Alumni iUagazine By Dr. Frank O. Beck, '95 First in a sef':es 0/ articles on retired mem bers oj I.U. jocallY. E. and E. St/Ldio. Guido H. Stempel the Word W orlcer mISSIOn he has from a publishing com pany of New York and Chi cago. Then, for an arousing and most edify ing half hour, he pulled from his mental index new words illustrating the romantic task in which he was engaged_ "S tumpy," he said, " is a very old word well on its way back into popular use. It mea ns money, the wherewithal; as, we wo uld have a new ca r if we had the stumpy." "What about the word, blitzkrieg?" I asked . "Is not that a new word?" ''It is," explained Professor Stempel, "that word, born to the German lan guage, is today rather common in many vocabularies, although it might be said to be scarcely more than three years old." "Ah, of the '37 vintage! So we have come to date our words, too! " ] co n cluded. "Yes," he agreed , "along with dated coffee, dated bread and other dated things, we now date our words_ Such words as ground-school, baby-farm and many others have their dates rather definitely fixed_" Then we talke-d of hyphenated words . the many new uses of the word per sonal£zed, the arresting new words in Conrad Richter's The Trees, and then regretfully I shifted the conversation from words to deeds. "A ny secon d interest?" said Profes sor Stempel, echoing my question be fore telling of his column of word stud ies contributed periodically to various newspapers and of his weekly column in the Bloomington Star 011 music and musica l programs of the University and cOJllmunity. This he considers his hobby, but these columns reveal him not only a true lover of music but also as a keen music critic. He plays "skat," I know, and mem bers of the small coterie with whom he plays, I understand , are unanimousl)' of the opinion that he is by no means a weak opponent. "His -family? " you wonder. There are yet two Stempels in the 1940 Catalog of the University. -Myrtle Em mert Stempel, AB'02, AM'15, teaches comparative philology with the en thusiasm that has dominated her long years of teaching and th e son , John Emmert Stempel, AB'23, returned two years ago to his alma mater to head the department of journalism. Then there is Guido, Jr., AM'27, AM'28, PhD'34, who teaches at Carnegie Tech . So in Professor Stempel's schedule are stuely and writing and games and autoing to odd and distant points and ea ting at unus ual and bizarre places and hospitality, but somehow in his study you get the impression that all these, barring his family, are "boon doggling" compared to work with words. And if he made words as in teresting to his students as he did to me that hour it was really a most stupid student who would wish "to take it on the lam. " ] n partin g, ] asked this consideratG and scholarly emeritus professor if T might tell his students and friends about him and his present work. " To be sure," was his reply. "Tell them that with me it is, ' the mo re time, the less leisH re.' " 19 Alumni N flies••• Around The News World With I.U. Alumni 1869 SA MUEL E. MAHAN, AB, wh o had bee n th e old est living graduate of I.U., di ed at St. P a ul , Minn. on Sept. 20 at th e age of 94. Before co ming to LU. for hi s coll egiate train· i ng, Mr. Mahan had enlisted in th e Civil War wh en he was 17 years old. H e had lived in SI. Pa ul for 1he past 46 years, an d was a past vreside nt of th e J.U. Alumni club in th e twin c iti es. Compiled by . . . . . . Hilda Henwood, '32 1874 1876 1881 I.U. lost a fam ous son in the death of JOHN T. THOMPSON, '81, LLD hon'22, retired brigadier·general of the U.s.A., at his home in Creat Neck, N.Y., on June 21. Burial was at West Point, in recog niti on of hi s servo ice to hi s co untry, for whid. in 1919 the War Depar1ment awa rd ed hi m the di stingui shed service medal for "exce pti onall y meritori ous a nd conspi cnous service as chi ef of th e small a rm s divi sion () f th e offi ce of th e cbief of ordnance, in whi ch capac ity he was charged with the design a nd prod uction of all small arms and ammuniti on th ereby supplied to the U.s. Army, whi ch result s he achieved with such signal success that serviceable rifles and ampl e amm uniti on therefor were at all times avail a ble for all troops ready 10 receive and nse Ih em.'· Retired in 1914, he was recal led to service during jhe World War, and it was durin g thi s period th a t he in vent ed th e T hompson sub·machin e gun a nd redesigned th e Briti sh Enfi eld rifl e to make it kn own as th e best rifl e ill th e world. Ge ll ' eral Th()mpsoll came to th e University with 20 1888 J OSEP H H EN RY HOWARD, AB , A M'90, former professo r of LB tin in Ihe Univ ersity of So uth Da kota, is now living in Spokane, W a~ h . , where a so n resides. 1889 j\·lrs. iVIARG.\RET DODDS Rose, BS, wid ow of TH EO DOHE F. ROSE, BS'75, !.U. tru stee for several years and donor of the Memorial Well ·House and also the Rose Cup , given each yea r to th e class having the largest percen· tage of it s members back for Co mm encement, died on SeVI. 19. She was th e gran dd a ughter of Presid ent Andrew Wyli e, wh ose portrait she prese nt ed to th e Uni versity in 1908. For ma ny yea rs she and her hu sband we re among th e cultural and social leade rs of Muncie. A so n, FREIlERtcK DODDS ROSE, AM'28, presi. dent of th e Me rcha nt s Trust Company in Mun cie, snrvives. Many alumni jumped into th e spotli ght be· ca use of former associati ons with WENDELl. L. WILLKIE, AB'13, LLB'1 6, a nd a mong these is CHARLES T. CAHI'ENTER, AB, to wh om credit was given for pla cin g his home to wn , Coff ey· vill e, Kan. , on th e na ti onal politi cal map as one of the Willki e speakin g pl aces. Willkie got a job as schoo l teacher at Co ffey vill e in 1913 through th e effort s of Mr. Ca rpent er, a member of t he school board . A form er bank er, Nl r. Carp enter is still act ive a t 81 in hi s own sa vin gs and loan a ssoc iatio n. •••By Classes Albert H. Yode r, AB'93 , former president 0/ Vin ce nn es University and nationally known WERST(;R V. MOFFETT, AB, wh ose legal ca reer began and ended in Bloom field, di ed at th e Indi a napoli s Meth odi st Hospital on J I.Il y 25. He wa s born near Spe ncer on a farm where lea rns cha nged for th e T erre H a ute· Bloomington stage coaches. In th e yea r a ft er grad uati on, he married cl assmate ELLA RY AN, AB, continu ed teaching school, a nd in 1894 reo ce ived th e LLB from the Uni versit y of Mi chi· gan . For more than 17 years he was a memo be r of the Bloomfield school boa rd . R OWARD L. WII"ON, AB, A\\1'9 1, died at hi s h ome in Bloomington, Calif., fr om a hearl allack on July 14. After leav in g J.U ., Mr. Wil so n continued hi s edu cati on a t H ar· va rd and Co rn ell and for 30 yea rs ' vas ac tive in the edu ca tional world as p resident of th e R iver Falls S tat e Normal in Wi sconsin and as teacher in so uth ern Cal iforni a secondary schools until hi s retirement in 1926 to de· vote hi s time to hi s ora nge grove. Alth ough he was 76 years old, he had remai ned aC li ve in thi s work to within an hour of his death. child psychologist , di ed at Seattle, Wash ., on Sept. 22. Hi s widow , the former Sllsan N . Griggs, A 8 '93, sllrvives. hi s parents when hi s fath er, Col onel J am es Th ompson, was made professor of milita ry science a nd ci" il engin eerin g. Th e son, fol· lowin g in hi s fa th er's steps, went 0 11 to West P oin t, se rved as ca pta in in the S pa nish·Amer· ica n War, and wa s then tran sferred to t he ordn ance department. Burial serv ices were held in Bloom in gton on Aug. 13 for Mrs. Charles Harri s ( MARY MC CALLA, BLl , a granddaughter of I.U .'s fir st president , Andrew Wylie. She and Pro· fesso r Em eritu s RAHRlS , AB'79, LLD hon'29, were li vin g in Clevela ud at Ih e tim e of her dea th . P erh a pB the last o f those who ent ered Ihe Uni versit y from tlt e old Monroe Co unty Fe· ma le Semin ary, Mr s. Roe L. Winslow (FnANcEs PER RI;>IG) di ed on Se pt. 8 a t Ih e home of her da ught er, Mrs. THA NA WINSLOW Wyli e, AB' ll , of Bloomington. Mrs. Winslow was a nati ve of Monroe County and a memo ber of one o f il s pioneer famili es. Your Chanee Here~s To Get That Arbutus! If yo u never have had a cop y of the Arbutus for yo ur years at l. U. here is an opportun ity to get one at bargain prices- $1.50 a copy. Extra copies for certain classes are still available. Look at the be· ginning of your class secti on to see how many are left. Then fill in th e coupon below and send it in NOW before tht! £uppl y is exhausted. I.U. Bookstore Indiana University Bloomington, Jnd. Enclosed pl ease find r emittance of for co pi es of the Arbut u~, to be se nt post· paid to: $.. 1884 A loa n fund bequest of $20,000 in memory of H ARR Y B. BURNET, BL, a nd P ERCY B. BURNET, BL, A M'87, was a vailabJ e to stu dents thi s fa ll. The memorial fund was esta blished by th e Ja te Mrs. H. B. Burnet (MAnY QU ICK BURNET, Al\! hon'33), lea der in promotin g a rl apprec iation in Indian a . Name Street Cit y & State T he October 1940 Dr. Ernest H. Lindley-A Great Leader in a Great Work! On Aug. 21, the radio operator on the S. S. "Asama Maru" flash e d this me3sage to Bloomington from mid·Pac ifi c: "His JOIl[· ney ended peacefully thi s morning. Burial Ht sea ." Thus came the word o f th e passing of one of the great college presid ent s wh o graduated from Indiana Univer sity. ERN EST HIRAM~ LUIDLEY , AB '93, AM'94, Han LLD'22, chan cellor emeritu s of th e Univer sity o f Kan sas, had s uccumbed to an a llack o f pl e urisy which cut short hi s world tour in Japan a mo nth earlier. With his wife, the fonn er ELiSAllETH KID· PER, AB'93, Dr. Lindl ey left in October, 1939, for a world cruise shortly aft er he had re tirpd as chancpllor at Kansas. Be fore he was stricke n with his fatal ill ness, Dr. Lindley had plann ed to r e turn to Kansas to teach a course in philo so phy ther e. Although he was an ardent tarpon fi sher man , he once sai d, "There is one thing I'd rather do than fish for tarpo n. And that is tea ch. It still is st imulatin g a s champagne to deal with young minds eager to know about li vi ng." Throu~hout th e bll'3Y years of hi s life wh en he wa s in turn student, in structor, h ea d of t he de partment of philosophy at I.U.; pres i. dent of the University of Idaho, and chancel lor of th e University of Kan sas, he was al· 1890 JOHN A. MILLER, AB, LLD hon'28, Swarth more Coll ege professor emeritu s, has present ed to th e University a portrait o f hi s late wife, Mrs. FRANCES MOIlGAN Swain Miller, '83. The picture is to be hun g in the Student Building, funds for which Mrs. Miller as the wife of President Swain helped to obtain. 1892 With services dating back to 1901 at Ohio State Univ ersity, JAMES E. HAGERTY, AB, reo tired with the emeritus rank from ac tive duty on Sept. 1. Joining the Ohio S tat e faculty as assistant professor of economi cs a nd sociology, he later se rved a s ac tin g head of that department. Since 1904 h e held a full profes~orship, wa s dean of th e commerce coll ege for 10 years, establi sh ed and direct ed the sc hool of social admini stra · tion, and after 1932 was professor of soc ial admini stration . 1893 For th e first time since 1904, ADDISON LUTHER FULWIDER, AB, AM'OS, did not reo turn thi s fall to hi s po st as principal of the Freeport (}I\') high school. Instead he will spend th e year in eithe r Arizona or California to d e vot e hi s time to writing, an a cti vity whi c h already ha s contributed a county his· tory , a monograph o f the Lincoln-Douglas de· bate in Freeport , and numerous articles on Illinoi s and American hi story. The retired tea cher is a past president of a division in the Illin oi s education association, of the Freeport chapter of the Rotary Club, and a memb er of the library board. Indiana Alumni Magazine o ffi c ial leading cItizen. The acade mi c hOllors that hav e co rne to him, the places of g reat respon s ibility in his profession to whi ch h e ha s bee n ch ose n, have reflect ed lu ster upon Kan sas. " H e has don e hi s work as admini strative hea d of th e IInivers it y witLI ta c t and pe r · spi ca ci ty . H e ha s rai sed th e a cad e mi c stand· Hrd s of the IInive rsity in kee ping w ith th ~ fo rward mov cmf'nt of the times. He ha s h een, throll g h th e pa ss ing of governors and se na· tors and co ngressmen, our perman e nt c 1I1· tural spok esman-a tower of light on Moullt Oread. " ways one "of those rare educators whose presence on th e campu s <:on tr ibut ed far more th an sc holarl y a ll a inm ent s and teac hing abil· ity." RICk of the mat eri al facts of any career lies the real sig;nifi ca nce of a man's life, and of Dr. Lindley at h is r etirement, Kansas editor William All en Whit e wrote: "Mr. Lindley has been more than the head of the state univ ersi ty . H e has been our Chief palaeoutolog ist for the Geology Sur vey , Ottawa , Canada, from 1912 until hi s re tirement in 1938, EDWARD M . KINDLE, AB , LLD hon '39, died on Aug. 29. His ou tsta nd ing career began with an in s tructorship in geology at 1.U. in 1893·94, a nd progressed throngh memb ership in th e Cornell expedi tion to Greenland to assistant geologist in the Indiana Geologi ca l Survey, th en assistant geolog;ist in the U. S. Geo logica l Survey, and in later years he wa s a sp ec ial l ec t urer in geology at the Univer si ty of London and president of the Palaeontolo gical Society of America. 1895 CLAliDE BRANT, AB , who had re tired from hi s de ntal practice in Fort Sco tt , Kan ., a nd r eturn ed to Bloomington a yea r ago, died on Sept. 16. The body was crema ted, and the ashes returned to the grave of hi s wife in Fort SCOll, where Dr. Brant had spent his entire dental career of 37 years. Hi s office eq uipm ent was donated to th e FOri Sco tt dental soc iety fo;' use in a clinic, which wa s es tabli shed this year. 1898 Veteran a ll or ney ELl P . MYERS, AB, LLB'99, who practiced in Elwood for 40 years, di ed on Jun e 4. I-Je had been d e pl/t y prosec u· tor for six years, city attorney for three, ann president o f the Madison County Bar Asso· c iation. The widow and a dau ght er survive. 1899 The old clic he, "a small worlel," wa s ap· propriate in So uth America, WAYNE HANSO N, Pres id ent Emeritus WILLtAM LOWE BHY,\ N stresse d th e "qualit ies, wisdom, int eg rity, energ y, and th e co urage which mad e hi m cle· fend a t eve ry ri sk to himself th e cau ses and perso ns tha t. were hi s respo nsibi liti es. Hi s unexcelled virtues and graces made him be· lo ved b y thol/ sands." Dr. Lindl ey ne ver lost contact with l.U . Ac tive in r eorgani zin g the Alumni Assoc ia· t.ion in 19J.3, he served as Alumni Coun cil or until he urged that his name be withdrawn and " th e privilege passed on to other alllmni." Mrs. Lindl ey arrived in San Franci sco on Aug. 30 and was met by her two sons, ERNEST K. LtNOlt:;Y, '20, and Dr. Stanley Lindl ey o f F ergu s F a ll s, Minn. AB, fOllnel wh e n h e s topped thi s s ummer in Lima , wh ere, as he la te r related in the in· dianapolis Slar, " I so ught Ollt the director of the ce ns ll s. . . . As I sat at dinner with Dr. Arca Parro I asked him where he wa s educated . 'After San Marcos,' he answered quietly, 'I went to Indiana University.' My hand shot ou t : ' Hail to old 1.U.' The do c· tor's eyes glis tened as he talked of student days, and of the kindnesses he had received . 'One day,' he sa id , 'I was in line at the stu dent cafet eria . An elderly gentleman was ahead of me-very co urteou s. He ask ed abollt me and my work . 'And, who are you?' I sa id , finall y. " My nam e is Bryan," he said simpl y: " I am th e president." '1 shall never forget him ,' Dr. Parro added." In Y.M.C.A. work si nce he wa s presid ent of the I.U . or ganization in 1896, Mr. Han so n is now reo tired as a foreign secretary and i s devoting; his time to writin g ancl lecturing. 1901 Throwing an optmustlc oplllio n in the face of the predicted cata strophe whi ch "type and printer's ink, as well as the l egion of radio commentators, shri e k at us breathl essly morn ing, noon, and night," HAf'lS O. STECHAN, Los Angeles, in Indianapolis Star features reo call s that " only a cent ury ·and·a·quart er ago thi s very summer, Napol eon . . wa s onc~ more footloose . . . . Million s fear we are stand ing on the brink of a universa l crack up, rig;ht now. Nevertheless it wOllld seem that thp situation in the 19th century's first quarter was fraught with possibiliti es relatively mor~ ominolls than the present predi cament. For all its briefness, the period wa s one of far grea ter menace and un certa int y than the 21 .II Friend Worth Cultivating In fire insurance business ever since he left the University, Wickliffe P. Ray, '05, is president of W. P. Ray and Company, Inc., 155 EasL MarkeL, Indianapolis. lVlrs. Ray was Jessie Simmons, '00. G L Acting on his physician's advice, the Rev. WILLIAM T. ARNOLD has annonnced his re tirement from Ihe Methodist ministry. His 41 years as pastor ended aL Garrett, where he went three years ago from Marion afLer serv ing aL Kokomo, Muncie, Bluff Lon, and Logans port. In the North Indiana conference he had been dean of the EpworLh ForesL In stitute, chairman of the board of examiners, a member of the board of sLewards, and dele gaLe to the general conference three Limes. THE WONDER COAL E ~ N D o t THE WONDER COAL R A IT SCORES EVERY TIME .II Hoosier Product 01 Genuine Merit STERLING-MIDLAND COAL COMPANY CHICAGO-TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS 22 world is experiencing at presenL, becanse of the lack of snch faciliLies of speedy com municaLion and prompL informaLion as now prevail." Walter H. Crim, AB'02 Wins Amos Award 1902 1903 LEWIS M. TERMAN, AB and AM, LLD hon'29, psychology head at Leland Stanford, "made" a recent "The Debnnker," syndicaLed feaLure. A co-worker with Prof. Terman "on the most extensive study of great geniuses ever underLaken, says that these rare people are not queer, morbid, or eccentric. A total of 301 of the greatest geniuses in history were raLed on 67 different traits, snch as persist ence, comage, physical stamina, and general mental balance. The results showed the geniuses to be considerably superior to the average of people in general on these per sonality traits. The conclusion was: 'On the average, geniuses are probably the most normal persons in the whole human race.''' Roy E. ROUDEIlUSH, AB, a University visi· tor this summer, is associate professor of mechanical engineering in the Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. 1904 ORVILLE 1.. MORROW, of Fortville, former teacher, insurance man, and banker, died on July 18 in the Indianapolis Methodist Hos pital. After teaching for a short while, he organized a bank in Fortville which he served as cashier until he took up insurance busi· ness. He was secretary of the Fortville Build ing and Loan Association. 1905 News comes of the marriage of LEONA 1.. Tl'RNER. AB, to Lloyd Nichols, of Phoenix, Ariz. Formerly associated with the Christian Science publishing house in Boston and with organization headquarters in Washington. D.C., she had been living more recently in Tucson, Ariz. No details of the marriage were learned. Back home in Bloomington "to do a great many Lhings I always have wanted to do bUI never have had time to do" is OSCAR H. WIL' LlAMS, AB, PhD'23, dean emeritus of the College of Liberal Arts, Kent State Univer sity, who retired this summer from his work as fnll·time professor of economics. Engaged in edncaLional work for 47 years, he plans to continue research in educational, social, and political problems, especially in Soulh Amer ica and in Mexico. To a shelf already crammed with cups allli trophies signifying journalistic achievement, W ~LTER H. CRIM, AB'02, editor and publisher of Ihe Salem Republican-Leader, in June added the coveted Amos Award, presented La him nnanimollsly at the National Editorial Association convenlion for oULstanding serv ice to the N.E.A. For eight years Mr. Crim has been one of the "official family" of the N.E.A.-as a mem ber of the board of directors, Lreasurer for three years, and vice·presidenl last year. Per sonal and business reasons forced his "re linquishing the honor of election 10 the presi dency of the N.E.A., "hich tradition decreed would come to him at Lhis year's convention" (excerpt from Amos Award citation). How ever, he did serve last year as acting presi dent during the illness of the president. As a sophomore at l.U. in 1899, lVIr. Crim was editor of the Indiana Student when it be came a daily. On occasion of Indiana's fin;t football victory over Illinois, he, with William A. Patton and Clande Malloll, issued an "extra" ediLion of the Student in red ink. Not until 1928 did Mr. Crim enter the pub lishing business. At Ihat time he purchased the Salem Republican·ff7 eekly, which in the last len years has been cited 16 times ill State and national contests. ]'I'[ r. Crim is a member of the LU. chapter of Sigma Della Chi, national professional journalistic fraLernity, and is past president of the Indiana Weekly Press Associalion and Republican Editorial Association of Indi· ana. Erstwhile presidenl of the Alumni As sociation in 1919, 1936 and J937, as well 'IS presidenL of Ihe Alumni Council during 1934. 3:;, Mr. Crilll is now an Alumni District COlin· cilor. GWRCf. E. THER, AB, head of the depart ment of English in Milwaukee State Teachers College, died at his home OIl July 24. He was an "r' man and in undergraduate day.s was a member of Irack and baskelball teams, Tndependenl Literary Sociely, Mermaid. Y.M.C.A. cabinet, and president of the Prohibilion Club. For a short lime after The October 1940 I Dr. U. G. Weathel·ly~ AM~11 When Professor Emeritus U. C. Weatherly, AM'll, died on J Illy 18, Pre sid ent Em eritu s Wil liam Lowe Bryan paid him the following tribute: "P rofessor Weath e rly was one of th e most di stinguish ed mem bers o f the fa c ult y o f Indiana University within the past 50 years. Hi s eminent scholarship was recognized by his me mber ship in the most exclusive so cieties of his profession and by the un an imous concurrence of his colleagues. He was an inspir ing tea cher wh ose influence has gone out throughOl1 t the world through successive generations of hi s students. "He exerted profound influ e nce upon legi sla ti on relating to criminal s and paupers a nd also through direct co ncern with th e admini stration of charity at home. "He was a man of deep co n victi on on politi ca l and socia l qu estions, and though h e avoided publi ci ty h e did not h esi tate to make hi s convictions known and effective. Besid es his life as a sc hola r, teacher and influential citizen, Dr. Wea th erly had most interesting avoca ti ons . "Dr. Weatherly was a lover of poetry. H e read with ardent in terest th e best of th e current poets as well as those who have a place in the history of literature. . . . . "I mllst not. fail to recall that this scholar and lover of poetry was also a lover of sport, especially o f baseball. At certain periods, he had th e rare oppo rtunity of sitting on th e players' bench at the side of a team of great gradua tin g he s tay ed on at the University to teach English. The widow , form erl y ELlZA IlET H SM ITH, ' 10, two sons, and a daughter surv ive. 1906 HOWARO C. HILL, AB, head of th e depart men t o f social science at the University of Chicago high school since 1917 and professor in th e university since 1924, died on June 25 after a brain operation. When he l eft th e campus, where he had been a member of th e band and the orchestra, manager of the Glee Cl ub, on the staffs of the Dail)' Stu dent and the Arbutus, winner of th e Foster history prize, president of the Chess Club, he beg an hi s teachin g career. From the Brazil high sc hool he wen t to th e Milwaukee S tate Normal and from th e re to C hi cago_ He was president of the National Co un ci l for Social Studies at one time and anthor of books, texts, and articles in his field. 1907 WALTER MYERS, LLB, erstwhile of Indian apolis, is in Washington, D.C., these days as Indiana Alumni Magazine I fidence in a lon g record of distinguished serv ice to the organization and to th e teaching profession. President DuShane has been su perintendent of Columbu s schools for the last 22 years and last year received an honorary LLD from Wabash Coll ege. News com~ s from Mrs. Asa A. Lee 1l'Iathews (MARY VERA VAN BUSKIRK, AB) now at Blacksbu rg, Va., where, she says, as well as being a h ousewife, she is assistant in Ger man at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute thi s year. Mr. Mathe ws is a professor of geology and her so n a so ph omore in the In stitut e. 1909 As execu ti ve sec re ta ry o f th e Evaporated Milk Association, FRANK E. RICE, AB, repre sents evaporated milk manufacturers of th(' United States in trade promotion, research. and leg islat ive work. His headquarters are in Chicago at 307 North Michigan Ave. Dr. U. G_ Weatherl), players and shar in g to some extent their profess ional interest and knowledge of the great American game. "Finally, I cberish the intimate friendship of Dr. Weatherly as a priceless fOI·tune throu gh th e years of our life together at Indiana ." the new fou rth assistant postmaster-general. T hi s is not hi s first federal office, since in 1936 he was named chief co unsel to the Senate co mmittee on campaign expendi tures. The Indinnapolis Star of Aug. 8 used for an editorial th e remarks of JESSE H. NEWLON, AB, speaker before the Nati onal Education Association: "The educator asserted that too ma ny teac hers have been imputin g false, rna· ter iali stic motives to war, tea ching 'senti· mentally' about peace and picturing the United States as ap isolated stronghold im mune to ailments afflicting the rest of th e world. One of the worst evils, Dr. N ewlon declared, was the theory that this cOllnt ry is self-su ffi cient and can safely ignore the co n· fli cts ra ging abroad. The doctrine that \,'a r never settles anything is also erron eous, the ed uca tor insis ted." 1908 Ano th er honor brought to I .U. by it s alumni is the election of DONALD DUSHANE as presi. dent of the National Education Associa ti on. The virtually unanimou s vote, said th e In dianapolis Slar, was an expression of con To his career full of versatile activities that has in clud ed th e post of high commissioner of th e Leagu e of Nati ons for German ref ugees and now the presidency of the Brook lyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, JAMES G. M cDONALD, AB, AM'10, ha s added another servi ce, membership in the New York City board of education. The Indianapolis Star throws a bouquet to him and hi s alma mater: "The Got.ham appointment r e flect s credit on Mr. McDonald's qualities of le adership and also on the value of training he received in th e state university at Bl oom ington. He was not a leader in ca mpu s affairs, but was inclined to co ncen trat e o n a heavy academic course. He is another on the long li st of produ cts of thi s state's hi gher educational in stituti ons who have made a mark in the schola s ti c world." The Stnr may not know it, but Mr. Mr. Donald early showed ability to handle a sit uati on _ Tradition has it that one of his professors, exaspe rat ed over trying to decipher McDonald's exami nation papers, {inally wrotc on one, "Please try to make your wntIllg legible." McDonald, upon receiving the of fending paper back, scanned the equally difficult. writing of the professor and, ap proaching the desk, asked, "What did you wrile here, Dr.- - ?" LILLIAM B. MUELLEII , MD, on the sta[f of the Indianapoli s Methodist for the last eight years as ass istant th esia, resigned to beco me head of partm ent of anesthesia in the City on Sep t. 1. medical Hos pital in anes the de Hos pital 1910 LESTEIl C. GIFFORD, AB, is another alumn us ri sing to prominence in the news world from various chores on the Dnil)' StudP,ftl . Now editor and publish er of th e Hickory Daily Record, Hickory, N.C., he has been made president of the N_C. Press Associa tion. Threp class members hav e died si ll ce the la st iss ue of the Nlagnzine: F ERMEN L. PICK nT, AB, AM'13, PhD'IS, dean o f th e grad lOat e sc hool and head of the department o f botany in Washington State Coll ege, Pullman; FRED L. WILSO"l , Bloomington law yer; and EMIL H. MA NGEl., AB, A i'v['29, principal of th e U nion City high school. Mr. Pickett wa s head of the botany department fol' 23 yeaH 23 at Wa shingt o n S tate and in 1930 was made dean of th O" gradua te school. Of a reliring di s· posItIOn, Mr. Wil so n spenl a g rea l deal of tim e on his hobby, craft work, whi ch was given to children among wh om he had many fri ends. i\Iangel played cen ler on the basket· ball tea m while he was a lt e nJin g LU . Mrs. Mang el was LENA WILSON, AB'30. and daug ht er spe nt the summ er in th e moun· lains along th e weste rn coast. Th e group, in · c1uding the chauffe ur and the nurse for Mr. Carpe nter, invalid from a n ailment inc u r red in th e World War, came fro m the Carpenter home in Miami , Fla., and made h eadqu3fters for a tim e at the Picken s farm near S pe ncer. Mr. Ca rp ent e r was formO"rly a Brazil banker. How comp li caled it is 10 make a U.S. flag, Mrs. M Alty BH N Wright Thompson, AB, of Green sb urg, desc ribes in an Indhwnp olis Sun· do )' Star fea ture. The projeci was und e rtaken yea rs ago when sh e was principal of ih ? Elmira ( Ore.) high school during the Worl<l War. Charles N. fullZ, '03 , is vice·president 01 Ih e Union Trllst Compan)' in Indianap olis. In addition to holding Ih is post for th e pasl 14 years, he also practices law. Traveling in a Irail er de luxe, eq uipp ed even to air co ndilioning, i'lrs . Jay V. Ca r· penler (HAZEL PICKENS) wilh h er hu sband At Ih e dedication of the new bui ld in gs for the Unive rs it y of Colorado Ihi s summer Mrs. Edward H . El li s (EDIT H HEN NEL, AB, AM· '12), of Greybull, Wyo., represented Indi ana University. ~Ieuua For Alumni • You Will Like Our Good Food Excellent Service Moderate Prices THE nOOK NOOK Just across from the Campu s 1911 Brought inlo th e lim e li gh t rece ntly for a sk etch in the Indianapolis News was Miller H am ilton, LLB, and Mrs. Hamilton (E REMA WILK, '15 ), o f Indianapolis, for Mrs. Miller is the sister o f Mrs . Wend ell L. Willkie (EDITH WILK, ' 12 ). Mr. Hamilt on, former city editor of th e Sont" Bend News·Times an d la ter in charge of publi cit y fo r the forestry bureau o f the U.S . Departm e nt of Agricul · ture, Washington, D.C. , is now an executive wi th the Ce ntral Advertising Agency. Wh en th e Gree ns burg high sc hool opened this falJ ALVA ]VlcGRAW dicl not re turn t o hi s 3 1·year·old post of manual trainin g and in· dustrial arts teachi ng. Taking a rest becausp o f as thmati c troubl e, he will continu e to live in Greenshurg . THE DRINK EVERYBODY KNOWS Whoever you are ... whatever you do ... wher ever you may be ... when r ei urns, giving hj s occupa l.ion as wril er and I.oca ti on at O maha . Neb. Mr. Ha r r iso n, last repo rl ed in 1922, wa s th e n on th e Omnlw Bee. 1913 Back in th e day s wh e n WENDELL L. WJLLKtE , A B. LLB'16, LLD hon'38, was a junior in th e Elwood hi g h ,c hool, Mrs . ADA BUJlKE Bing, AB, was hearing a lot abou t her future cla ssmate fro m her lat e hu s band, then Willki e's Engli sh teacher. M rs. Bing. now Engl ish teacher in the Indianapoli s Emmerich Manual Training High Sc hool, used these le tter s to make a S lar fea ture story o f rem· iniscences on Willki e's hi gh school days. Sc ulptural carvings of WJLLKJE and PAUl. V. M c NUTT, AB, LLD hon'33, in Indi a na lim estone, formed th e central motif of all LU. alu m ni e xhibit in the Universi ty build· ing a t th e sta te fair this fall. Th e statuary was a project of th e promoti o na l div ision of Ihe Indi a na Lim estone In stitute. The second edition of Biographical Direc· tory 0/ Leaders ill Edu.c(t/.i on contain s the name o f GILnEHT 1-1 . FErtN, AM, past or in Ewing, Ky. The Rev. Mr. Fern also does some work for th e Alfred Holbrook College , Manchester, Ohi o. 1914 The first person to rece ive a doctor's de · g ree in the LU. de partment o f English, L IL' JAN B. BROWNFIELD, PhD , h as resigned h er positi on as professor o f Engli sh lit e rature at DePa uw University. WALTER PIHCHARD, AB, AM'I S, and Mrs. Prichard (NIARY WUBORN, AB'23) have ju st built a n ew bri ck, two·st or y, American colo nial ho use in C(1ll ege Town, s uburb o f Ba ton Rouge, La. Mr. P ri cha rd is head o f the department of hi sto ry in Lo ui siana Stat e University and editor of th e Lou isiana His· lorical Qnarlerlr. An act empowerin g the U.S. Supre me Co urt to regulate crim ina l procedure in th e federal co urts ancl desc ribed by the Whit e Hou se as "a far·rea chin g and imp ortant step in the reform of the law " c ulmi nates two years' work led by Professor JAMES J. ROOI NSON , AB, di· rec to r o f th e Institute of C rimin a l Law Ad· mini stration a t the Univers ity, in th e offices of which much o f th e drafting of th e leg is· lation wa s done . Pro fesso r Robinson ap· peared before Congress io nal commitl ees sev· eral times in the int erest of the act. Suffering from a fractureJ hip and unabl e to return thi s fall to her po st in the Bloom· ington hi gh school, NELLIE M. CARIT HERS, AB, is confined in St. Elizabeth 's H osp ital, Dan· ville, Ill. Only a few years ago she s uf· fered a s imila r accident a nd wa s for ced to re main in a cast for a long tim e. you think of refreshment you welcome an ice-cold Coca-Cola. For Cola-Cola IS 1912 A "trace r" se nt ou t for IRWIN F. H ,IRRI SON 1915 pure refreshment-familiar to everybody .. . and ice-cold Coca-Cola IS everywhere. When 1945 co mes a round, John, son of L,;STEII A. CORYA, AB, will be a freshman at LU., r eports Mr. Co rya, of Scarsdal e, N. Y., whose dau g ht e r Jane is a so pho more in Sm it11 College. "For fo ur years 24 hav e been teaching adult The October 1940 Sales manager for the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company in Tulsa, Okla., is LAVORY D. CHAVENS. FRED WAITE ENGLE is agent in Decatur, Ill., for the Great American Insur ance Company. "Mom, 1916 RODERT S. TELFER, AM, formerly of Am herst, N.H., has purchased and is now in charge of the former R. L. Cosier Company, owned by Ilis cousin, Mrs. R. L. CosIer (ALlCE H. ADAMS, AB'17), of Bloomington. Mr. Telfer sold the fraternity dance program and llovelty part of the business and will con tinue binding as the principal business with a limited amount of college text publishing. C. Carroll OUo, '18, recenlly was appoinled general agenl for the Detroit agency oj the Matual Benejit Lije Insurance Company 0/ Newark, IV,/. In announcing the appoint menl, Herbert C. Kenagy, superintendent oj agenls jor Ihe coml)([ny, said, "Since illr. Olio gradualed from Indiana University, he has 'aken nt leasl one Ilniversity course every year. I know oj no one who is a more thorough stur/ent, nol only oj lije insurrlnce, but 0/ business generally." consumer education classes in the Los Angeles city schools," Mrs. Albin E. Len (RUTH M. MJLLER, AB), reports from Califomia. CLIFF0l10 N. MILLS, AM, received the PhD degree from the University of Wisconsin at commencement exercises this year. Dr. Mills teaches at IJIinois State Normal University, Normal. CHARLES HtRE, AB, AM'17, PhD'27, head of the science department in Murray State Teachers CoJlege in Kentucky, has been elected president of the Kentllcky Academv o[ Science. Lours W. ARBUR"", AB, MS'31, left the su· perintendency of the Cambridge City schools to take a similar position in Albany this year. Mr. Arburn was a graduate fellow in education at the University for the school year 1932-193.3. This year's president of the Indiana Bar Association is Judge ROSCOE C. O'BYRNE, AB, .lD'18, of Brookville. Author of a 600-page textbook, Foods and Nulrilion, to come off the press in Janu· ary, ?lII-s. Brnce Silver (FERN T. POTTS) leaches in the Lincoln Junior High School, Albuquerque, N.M. Going to Albuquerque in 1930, Mrs. Silver was a homemaker for her two children and husband until he "as killed in an automobile accident. Since then she has taken a BS degree from the University of New Mexico and an MS degree from the University of Chicago. VIRGIL L. EIKENBERRY, AM, superintendent of the Vincennes schools and a major in the reserve corps of the U.S.A., has been ap pointed chairman of the CMTC committee for the fi [t h corps area of the Reserve Of· ficers Association. This area comprises In· diana, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Ohio. '\1r. Eikenberry has been chairman of the Knox County CMTC for the last 15 years. Indiana Alumni Magazine Granted a year's leave of absence, J OH N W. MOHLAND, AB, AM and LLB"17, dean o[ tire Valparaiso University law school, will sene as visiting professor of law at tile Uni versity of Kentucky this year. 1917 In the sudden death of CLAlR H. SCOTT, LLB, on Aug. 6 at Lake Geneva, Wis., the University lost another of its outstanding alumni. Scoll'S participation in affairs J.V. began with his freshman year in 1912 and continued throughout his life. President of his junior class and a member of the track and varsity football teams each year until 191.5, he later served as president of the "I" Men's Association, chairman of the Alumni Association's executive committee, alumni councilor, president of the Chicago Alumni Club, and a member of the University athletic committee and the J.U. Foundation. In 1916 he was one of the University soldiers that went to the Mexican border and a few years later was a World War captain of Battery F, 150th field artillery, a Bloomington unit. Go ing into business in Lincoln, Neb., with the .Midwest Baking Company, he shortly after moved to Chicago to JOIn an investment securities firm. At the time of his death he was in the brokerage business. GEOIlGE H. BROWN, AB, Louisville, Ky., reports that his daughter, NELLIE V. BROWN, AB'39, completed work for her AM degree at LU. last summer. His son, Louis C. Brown, is teaching in Louisville. The sales manager in Indiana for. General Mills, Inc., is Fred C. Wilson, former terri tory-salesman for the International Harvester Company and for Purina Mills. NIr. Wilson is a 32d·degree Mason and Shriner. His headquarters are in tile Architects' Building, Indianapolis. Ross H. Garrigus is now editor of the Vincennes Sun·Commercial. He was formerly in newspaper work in Quincy, Mass. 1918 STELLA M. ROUSE, AB, was married duro ing the summer to Roy O. Williams, graduate of the Indiana State Teachers College; they live in Chicago. Before her marriage .Mrs. Williams was director of a dormitory at the college, and both formerly taught in the Bloomington high school. GLEN H. HAYES, former clerk in a Bedford stone mill, is a merchant ill Kemp, Ill. Sleepiness and fatigue from reading are danger signals for either young or old eyes - a warning that the eyes may be strained from overwork or from poor light. It's so easy and in expensive nowadays to light condition your home for eye safety that it's bad business to risk unnecessary eye·strain. A flood of soft, glareless light for reading or studying costs only a few cents a month for elec tricity. And today's Better Sight lamps remove ail guesswork about lighting efficiency - the IES tag on each of them certi· fies correct application of the newest discoveries In lighting science. TUNE IN * The Hour of Charm" Network. Sundays at 'Musical Americana" Network. Tuesdays at NBC Red S P. M. NBC Blue 7 P. M. PUBLIC SERVICE" COMPANY OF INDIANA 25 1919 National president for this year of Delta Zt>ta, social sorority, is Mrs. Hubert Lundy (GIIACE E. MASON, AB), of the Martinsvillt> Road. Last year she was national vice·presi· dpnl and IO years ago was nat ional delegate. Mrs. HEDWIG G. LESEll, AB, AM'25, assistant professor of German at LU., has been granted a year's leave of absence to spend in work with Dr. B. J. Vos at Tucson, Ariz., on pub· lications which they are editing. Dr. Vos was formerly head of th e LU. deparlment o f German. The arrival of Mary Elizabeth on July 14 and Ihe purchase of a hou se made a full sum mer for CECIL C. CllAIG, AB , AM'22, and Mrs. Craig (RUTH SWAN, AB'22, AM'23). Mr. Craig is professor of mathematics in the University of Michigan. 0/ 1919 Arbutus $1.50 President of Froehling and Robertson, Inc., in Richmond, Va., is GRANT JAY DURANT. Lieutenant-Commander FIRMAN F. KNACH EL, LLB, commanding officer of the 4th bat talion, U.S. Naval Reserve, Indianapolis, was in charge of the sub-chaser U. S. S YP 26 in recent maneuvers on Lake Michigan. Mr. Knachel has been named special recruiting officer in Indianapoli s. (See pai'ie 20 for details) • Our service rings the bell with our satisfied customers. They get what they want without endless waiting. • Our soda shop becomes more popular each day. When you want a "snack," come over and see us. • Our locati on, right across In diana Avenue from the Adminis tration Building, makes us hand y, so come and see us. We Aim to Please. The Philippine Islands will not be ready for independence in 1946 in the opinion of JOSE PIATOS, AB, professor of European his tory in the Universi ty of the Philippines. Al though the uneducated clamor for the inde pendence promised them in 1946, he asserted that a majority of the well-informed believe that independence should not be granted until t he country is better prepared to protect itself. Piatos recently returned to LU. to do advanced work in history. He was one of the first to teach golf on the old course long since converted into the site for the stadium and parade grounds. 1921 ALIn:RT R. VAN CLEAVE, AB, head of the department of education and psychology in Piedmont College, Demorest, Ga., has been elected dean of the college_ JAMES J. HAGAN, AB, of Oregon, III. , former teacher and now lec turer before clubs and schools, has been made admissions counselor for Eureka College. He works during the summer month s with the college public re lations office, but through the winter will continue his lectu re work. One of his most popular programs is a natural color movie, "O'er Lincoln Trails." Mrs. LOTTI):; M. KIllllY, AB, LU.'s asso ciate dean of wome n, is a new member of WOO DWAR D INS URAN UE Phone 2131 Since 1894 • AUTO • • 26 A member of the staff engaged in reo search in tropical medicine for the Rocke feller Foundation, New York City, is LOWELL T. COGGESHALL, AB, AM '23, MD'28, who previously was assistant professor of medi cine in the University of Chicago_ 89 Copies Left 0/ 1922 Arbutus $1.50 (See page 20 for details) JOHN L. HUNTINGTON, AB, of Washington, D.C., has been appointed to take charge of what was the Federal Alcohol Administra tion for which hc had been deputy adminis trator. As head of the agency, now reorgan ized under the name Basic Permit and Trade Practice Divi sion, Huntington will have the title of assistant deputy commissioner of the Bureau of Internal Revenue_ Mrs. Hunting ton was ZENA MAE DINEHART, AB'25. Mrs. R. Alfred Wilcox (HELENE G. FISHEll, AB) died on Sept. 8. Mrs. Wilcox had been living in Indianapolis only for the past year, having previously lived In Chicago and Peoria, Ill. 1923 WENDELL H . STEPHENSON, AB, AM'24, pro fessor of history at Loui siana State Uni versity and editor of the Journal 0/ Southern History, taught at Duke University last sum mer, as he had the summer previous. DAVID G. WYLlF:, AB, president of th e Bloomington Limestone Company, is a new member of the Bloomi ngton city school board_ Wylie is an active member of the Chamber of Commerce and other civic enterprises. Mrs. Leland McCool (MARY E. PAYNE, AB) is in Boonville, where her husband is coach in the high school. She resigned her post in the Harrisburg (IlL) high school when she was married this summer. 1924 Vi ce-preside nt and treasurer of the Central Rubber and Supply Company in Indianapolis is JAMES H _ RUDDELL, AB. 70 Copies Left LIFE G. B. Woodwar(l '21, Jeff Reed '24, C. M. While '29 Citizen's Trust Bldg. Crawfordsville physician ROllLllT J. MILLIS, MD, resigned his post as city heal th officer to accept a place on t he board of school trustees. 1922 1920 16 Copies Left the Business and Professional Women's Club State committee on education. 0/ 1924 Arbutus $1.50 (See page 20 for details) The October 1940 Stat e Ho spital sician in the feeble-mind ed. and p sychiatry c in e. and prior to that senior phy F ort Wayne School for the He i s a ssociat e in neurology at the I. U. Sch oo l o f Medi THEODORE R. OANN, AB. JD'30, is th e re el ec ted president of the J ewi sh Community C f' nt t' r Association, a con s tituent age nc y of th e Indianap oli s Community Fund and the J ewi sh Federat ion. LEBOY BAKER, LLB, in command of th e Third Ball a lion, lSOth Field Artillery, has b ee n promo ted from major to li e ute nant colonel. H e practi ces law in Bloomington and was form e rly prosecuting allorney. Cath erine Feltu s, AB'36, ( Now Kay Craig of the movies) is shown above with her uncle, Paul L. Feltus, '21, U niuersit)' Trustee, when she caine ba ck to Bloom,:ngton this summer for the world premiere of her first important picture. Hollywood columnists ha'ue noted Mi ss Fellus " going pla ces" wilh Preston Foster, another new movie star. Mum KENNEY, AB, o n the ex ecutive s taff o f Senat or SHERMAN MINTON, LLB'lS, ha s been promo ted to capt ain of infantry, Reserve Corps. Al10rney in the adjudication division of the Vete rans' Admini stration Facility, Dayton , Ohio, is LAWRE NCE R. MtCHE NER; ESTHER HOUGWrO N is the owner of th e Fireside In· dustri es Gift Shop in Peoria, Ill. ; and WIL' LlAM D. AOAMS is a cl e rk in the .Modern Sho e Store in Huntingto n. 1925 All electrical g un shoo tin g 1,000,000,000, 000,000 atomic buH ets a second is being used by University of Illinois scienti sts to l earn how t h e nucl e us or core of atoms is put to ge ther. On e of the fa c ulty members at \Vork in the resear ch is LELA ND J. HAWORTH, AB, AII1'26, who j oin ed th e Illinois staff two years a go , going from the JVla ssachllselLs In stitute of T ec hnology. Mrs. Haworth \Va s BARBARA MOTTIER, AB'23 . JAcon J. SCHMIDT is general superint ende nt of the fi eld departm e nt of th e East Ohi o Gas Company in C leveland, Ohio. Mrs. Schmidt wa s CAROLINE HEYLMA NN, AB'24, no w the mo th e r of three children. 1928 JOSEPH S. SKOOGA, BS, MD '30, superin tend e nt o f the Mu scatatuck colony for th e feeble-minded, Butl erville, has charge of on e of the m ost modern and complete i nstitut ion s o f its kind in this country, and he plans for the colony to "take its place as one of the for e most institutions for the care and train ing of mental defectives." It is hi s hope that the services of the in stitution will ex tf'nd beyo nd th e care of isolated cases to corrective measures in the commullity th a t will prevent tile need of isolation. Dr. Skobba wa s form e rly dini cal di rector o f C~ntral Indiana Alumni Magazine Fro m the prolifi c typewrit er of free-lan cing WILLIAM C. MILLER, form e r city editor of the Bloominglon World, there continue s a variety of interesting features in the Indi· anapolis Su.nday Star: one on that seeming ly endless source of human interest, WENOELL L. WILLKtE, AB'13, LLB'16; one o n Lost River [see '13 cla ss notes] ; th e 25 milli on dol lar powder plant to be establish ed by On Ponts at Charl estown ; "Million Dollar Torches," about th e gas wa ste in Illinoi s in whi c h RALPH E SAREY, AB'22, AM '23, Stat e geologi st, explains th e cause; and one on Bl oo mington 's w ell-known " Chub" Hinkl e, who placed his collection , containing "everything from a pr ehi storic mammoth's tooth to Al Brady's pant s," in a mu seum opened this summ er . SYLVAN A. YAGER, MS, has b een made head of the industrial arts department , Indiana State T eac hers Coll ege. He had been criti c teacher in t he department and i s a past presi de nt of th e Indiana Indu strial Edu cation As socia tion. PAUL E. HAMILTON is dir ect or of mu sic in th e W a rren Ce ntral High School, Indi a napo lis. H e I S marri ed and ha s a three-year-old son . 1929 Ripley 's "B elieve It or Not" on June 23 showed tile pi cture of a mailbox with the in scription: " Golden Silv er Denti s t." Mr. SIU'ER, DDS, pra cti ces in Indianapoli s, and he liv es near the city. 45 Copies Left on June 2 Mi ss Mildred L. C rosby, of P onca City, Okla. Both spe nt the summer at th e Colorado S tate T ea ch er s Coll ege to work on advanced degrees. 1930 Married on Jill y 6 wa s GRIFFITH BIWOK S N IOLACK, AB, o n the edit orial staff o f th e Indianapolis New s, a nd Miss Susan Elli ott Hill, who auended Butler. They are at hom e at 3836 Ce ntral Av e nu e. WILLIAM E. CLAPH ,IM , BS, vi ce·president o f Magazin es Associat es, Inc., of N e w York C ity, and Mi ss Barbara Cole, of Windham, Conn., a gra duat e of Pa cker Coll egiat e In stitut e and a me mber of th e National S oc iety of New Ellgland Women, were wed thi s 511lnm er. CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION Investment Securities Represented By: J. Dwight Peterson, '19 Richard C. Lockton, '30 E. W. Barrett, '26 Noble 1. Biddinger, '33 C. W. Weathers, '17 M. F. Landgraf, '30 Frank J. Parmater, '38 417 Circle Tower of 1929 Arbutus INDIANAPOLIS $1.50 (See page 20 lor details) COMPLIMENTS Two oth er m e mbers of the cla ss in busi ness in Indi a napolis are: FREDERI CK W. H UNT, AB, wh o has an o ffice represe nting Blair and Company , In!:. , inv estment bank· ing firm o f New Yo rk City; BR UCE C. SAVAGE in the sa les divis ion of Atkin son and Com pany, realtors and home build er s. ROBEIlT r::. WASM UTH , AB , superintendent of the Kitch e n Maid Corpo ration in Andrews, married on J lin e 20 Miss Charlotte Hyde, Franklill Co ll ege alumna and junior investi gator in the Huntington offi ces of th e lIn el1lploy ecl relief commission. Another groom is GEOI1 C£ W. DIVELY, AB, teach er in Mon tana sch ool s for several years, who married OF SPRIGGS DAIRY PRODUCTS 3rd at Madison Bloomington 27 Other marri ages in th e cla ss includ e: SOl WtLlIAM SCHWAHTZ, ow ne r o f th e R . and S. s hoe s tore in Bl oo min g to n and simila r $to res in Greenca stl e a nd Kokomo, and M iss Fran ces O 'Con nell, o f Indi a napoli s, o n Jun e 29; GHACE EVE LYN DRAOIN C, [or mer grade music and art s llp ervi so r in th e Warren T o wn ship, Marion County, sc hools, a nd J erry Davi s, o f Alpena, Mi c h. , on Jun e 27; H ele n Ruth Rogers, chief di e titi an in Georgetow n Univ er· sity Hos pital , Washington, D.C., a nd Karl Finkel , on A ug. 10. 66 Copies Left 0/ THE PLACE In Bloomington Is the RENDEZVOUS North Side Square ••• Where You Get: • Sizzling Steaks __ ________ __ The Way You Like Them! • Delicious Dinners _______ _ Fit for a King! • Tasty Salads __ ____ ___ __ ___ __ That JII/ ell in Your Mouth! • Anything to Eat At Reasonable Rates! Plus: • Entertainment That Makes a Hit! • Service Exuding Friendlin ess! • Atmosphere __________ ______ __ Thal's Really Chummy! • Air-Conditioning For Your Comfort! ••• The Rendezvous Is Where You Meet Your Friends! 28 19:)0 Arhutus $1.50 IV i fe and si x-month-old dau g ht er , P a t ri c ia J ea nne, who had preceded him to Bord ea ux , a re no ll' a l Mrs. C raffi s' forme r hom e i n Ne w Cas tl e. 1932 Th e cla ss o [ '32 leads 0[[ wi th th ree birth s re port ed. T he n e w parent s are : AR'IOll) BERC , BS, a nd Mrs. Berg (K ,\THERt NE Y OUNC , A B'31. AM ':32), o [ Des Mo ines, I owa , wh o named th eir now five-month-old so n fo r Dr. B t> rl Edward Yo ung, head of th e l.U . d e· par tm ent of French; ARTH un THO MAS, B S, M '38 , teac her an d coach in th e McKi nl ey Juni or Hi g h ScilOol , Muncie, a nd M rs. Th omas (M AHTHA T EMPLES), who call th eir s ix-month· o ld Sl) n, M ic ha el ; RI CHARD A. BECK, A B , a nd M r. Beck (-"IAny SIE BENT HAL, BS), o[ Eva ns ton , who h ave a Ri c ha rd A., Jr. , born on July 20. (See page 20 lor details) 80 Copies Left Th e Connecti c ut jV[ u tu al Li fe In s ura nce Co mpa ny o n Aug. ]6 a nn ounced "w ith pl eas· ure th e co mpl et io n o f 10 yea r s o f loya l serv ice" by VI i\C ENT 1. RVOE, BS. A Todd re uni o n wa s held in N ew York C ity thi s slimmer wh en th e res pec til'e p os i. ti o~s of th e two bro th ers a nd sis ter brollght th em together in th e big cit y: D£AN 1'000 , AB, sales manager uf George J\. H orm el and Com pan y, Au s Lin, ?I·li nn . ; J OSEPH R. TODD , '28, mana ge r of publ ica ti o ns [or th e Service E ng ra vin g Co mpa ny, D et roit ; a nd Mrs. EvereLt B. Helm (MAR Y EllEN TODD, AB'34), e mpluyed in th e edu cat iona l depa rtm ent of Lh e Collimbi a Broa dcast ing Company. Mrs. E LSA K U£HSTEI ' £R C urry, A B, privat e secreta ry to the per son nel burea u h ead o[ Yal e U ni versit y, wa s mar ri ed on Sept. 7 to Thorval Martin, o [ May svill e, Ky. , wh ere h e has a posit ion with the Carn at io n Milk Com· pan )'. H e is a g rad uat" uf Yal e . 1931 A 'WO-mile tre k o n foot [rom Pari s to Bord ea ux with " homeless, [riendless, u n · directed m e n, wom en, and babies snffering h unger, ra in, chi ll , bull ets, bombs, and fa 42 Copies Left 0/ 1931 Arbutus $1.50 (See page 20 lor details) tig ue." S uch an e xp eri ence J EAN GRAFFI S, AB, Pari s cor res po nd e nt [o r th e N ews pa per En terpri se A s~oc ia t io n aud the A cme Pi ct ure Sy ndica te, describes f o r Lhe Bloomin.gton Star o n whi c h he [orrne rl y work ed . Seeing th e r ea r g uard wi th whi ch " I wa s fl eein g bombed 20 times, mac hin e-g unned s ix" and " fl o ppin g in th e rai lb ed beLween th e car wheels ihu s escaping fr agm ent s whi ch k ill ed and wounded many" are amo ng sprc ific inc idents which h e rela tes o[ hi s escape. S in ce cessation o[ fi g ht in g he ha s re tllrn ed 10 Pari s, and hi s 0/ 1932 Arbutus $1.50 1S ee page 20 lor details) Among summ er marriages: J AMES P . COO K, J r. , A B, a nd M iss Frances Rul h Moody, But· ler, a t hOlne a t 3620 Nor Lh Merid ia n, Indi a n a poli s; TH1:CELEAH D. TALBEHT, GN, a nd Dr. H. H. McC la na han , lec t urer in ph ysiology in th e l.U . Sc hoo l o f De nL istry, I nd ianapoli s, a t home at 3020 N orth Illin ois; CHAR LES L. CARSON a n d .Mi ss Ina Corn ell, at h ome a t 344 Nor th Audu bon Roa d, Indi anapoli s; JOH N L. DEVOSS, D ecatu r a ttorn ey a nd nom in ee for Adam s Co unt y prusec uL o r, a nd Nli ss Bett y Mac klin, in cha rge o[ the auto mo bil e Jice nse burea u in Decatur; PAN SY MARIE Ft SHER, AB, Leach er in th e Monnt Olympu s high sc hool, a nd CL ARENCE BUECHELE, lVIS'35 , prin · cipa l o [ th e Win slo w high sc hool. 1933 Among earl y fall weddi ngs is tha t o f H ERIl1:RT T . WAGi'lER , AB, MD'36, n ow direc tor of th e S tu art C ircl e Hos pital, Ri chmond, Va., a n d M iss R ebecca L ew is, of York, Pa., a g ra dua Le o f th e C urti s In stiLut e, Ph iladel p hi a , and so lo harpis t with th e Indi a napolis SYlnphonl' O rchestra. 47 Copies Left oj 19:13 Arbutus $1.50 (See page 20 fo r d ela.ils) S ummer wed di n gs: VIUL ET E. NOHDllEHG, AB, and J am es M. ?I'IcCree ry, se r vi ce man with th e Po sta ge M e ter Company , at ho me a t 1814 North N ew J er scy, Indi a napoli s ; RUTH S. HOACLlN, CN '3.3, ancl I-TARRY D. WELl. ER, AB, AM '3S , a t hon le in Indianapoli s ; WILMA The October 1940 TVIcCLI~TOCK, AB, GN, forme r vIsIting nurse for the Nlonroe County Public H ealth Nursing Association, and ALMON HAIlMON , MS'36, at home in Scollsburg; TAYLOR T. HOffAll, BS, Seymour all orney, and Miss Fay e Louise K oe hl e r, of Indianapolis ; WILLIAM A . CON· NEIl, Columbus allorney, a nd Miss Mary Lou Mannan, of Martin sville; H ELEN ELIZABETH GORDIN a nd Harold Wakely Banks, gradu ate of ' the Pee kskill Military Academy in New York, at ho me in T erre Haute . search assistant in tbe highway r esea rch proj ec t at Purdu e; MAIlTH A A. BIlAND , BS, science teac her in th e Calumet Town ship schoo l, to Thoma s J . Conn or, a t hom e a t 646 Carolina Street , Gary; RUTH K. OTTEIl , G N, to CH ESTElt A. KOWALS, DDS'.38, of South Be nd; COil NELIA A. YO UNG, A B, to Morris Wood, of Gary. One of th e o utstandin g glass coll ec tions in th e Middle West is owned by Mrs. Rob e rI Cook (SAltA L. JEWETT, AB ), Bloomin g ton , according to Ernest o Seymour, Spa nish Texan and collec tor of ea rly American glass and c hinaware. Speaking before th e Mun cie Lions, he sa id : " I hav e been associated with collectors for 20 years and have seen many int eresting assemblages o f ea rly Ameri cana, but Mrs. Cook's is o ne of t.h e most complete of it s kind." Seymo ur lectures over WLB C a nd has invit ed Mrs. Cook to app ea r with him on a program. Births: Hu gh Willi am, a third ·wedding anniversary gift , to Mrs. William M . Parker (Loui se Wildman, BS), and Mr. Park e r, of Hut c hin son, Kan .; Sally J oyce to Mrs. Irvin Haley (BERNIcE GREENAWALT, AB), and Mr. Haley, o f Barron Lake, Nil es , Mich _; ;) bo)' on Sept. 20 to BA SIL ("Bill") COSTAS, AB, and Mrs. Costas, of Indianapoli s. 1935 Ross F. LOCKHIDGE, AB, AM'39, ali-Univer sity fell ow in Engli sh at L U. last year, will be in Harva rd for th e c urrent year on a scholar s hip, awarded him through work he has done at l.U. and in the Sorbo nne. With Mrs. Loc k ridge (VERNlO: B.~K EIl LOCKRIDGE, AB'38) and their so n, Hugh Ern est, he will live in th e Shaler Lane Apartme nt s in Cambridge. 50 Copies Left 0/ 1935 Arbutus $1.50 (See page 20 jor details) Coed marriages: BETTY ANNE BROWN, in pl ays at th " University and th e Federal Th " ater, Indianapoli s, and more r ecently in radio work in Chicago, to Donald A. D owd, of P e nn sylvani a and Ohio universiti es and al so with NBC in Chicago, a t home in Wil mett e, III.; MAllY ELOISE BAKER, BS, to Clar ence Alb ert Newell , at home at 435 West 119th, N ew York City; RUTH E . MERIlIFIELD , AB, to W. IVlax Fost er, Northwestern Univer si t.y, at home at 1129 North Alabama, Indi anapolis; ELI NOll STIERS to Kenneth K. Pet ers, at ho me in Indian a polis; GLENNA LEA BIlOWN, BS, to Huley Dal e Hines, at ho me at 812 W est Third , Bl oo mington. " Ed " marriages: WILLIAM CUIlTIS EwBANK, AB, g raduat ed now from the Harvard business school, and Miss Maxin e Stuart P e te rs, Butl er and Purdu e, at h o me in Wash ingt on; BEN F. ROGEHS, AB, Eastern Air Lines pilo t between Atlanta and points in T exas, and Miss June Elizabe th Clark, Orchard Hill , Ga., stewardess for D elt a Air Lin es; WILLIAM H. DENI STON, AB, LLB'37, and Mi ss Mary M c Do ugle, S herwood Sc hool of Nlusic in Chi cago , at home in Roch es ter; ROBERT A. E NG LE BIlIGHT, BS, associated with th e American Credit Corporation, Evan svill e, and Mi ss Edna Bi scho ff , at home at 15 Dre ier Bouleva rd. "Ed" and coed marriages: JOHN R ALPH MAHTINDALE, AB, LLB'36, and Mary Rogers, '28, Bl oo mington library a ssistant , at hom e in lI'Iarcy Village, Indianapoli s; RUTH LA MONTI: and CHAHLES L. WELKEIl, '40, in in s urance work in Anderson. Indiuna Alumni Magazine 1938 J. Thomas Buck, A B'39, former editor-in chief of the Indiana Daily Student, recently joined the slaff of th e Chicago Tribune. H e has been working lor the Cily News Bureall oj Chicago since taking his degre e. 1936 RE VA R. McMAHON, AB, clerk in th e L U . comptroller's office, was marri ed to NELSON G. GIlIL LS, BS'35, JO '37, LLM '4O, instruct or in bu s in ess law, on Sept. 14. They have go ne to N e w York City , where Mr. Grills has a $1,500 scholarship in Columbia Un iversi t y_ Other c1a ~s ma rriages: HELEN M . ROOT, AB , servi ce re prese ntative in th e commercial departm e nt, Indi a na Bell Tel e phone Co m pany, to Howard Booker McCilOrd, at home at 7170 North P e nn sylvania, Indianapoli s; FHEDF.IlICK B. HA NN A, AB, LLB'38, and Miss C harlotte K esling, Ball S t.ate T eac hers Col lege, at home in Logan spo rt; RALPH E. TIlIL LEIl , AB, and Mi ss iViary Koe hler, Tudo r Hall , Gulf Park Coll ege and Butl e r; ELOI SE KUNz, AB, to RALPH E. HIATT, AM'39, at hom e in Richmo nd; JOHN M. STUIlDEVANT , AB, and Mi ss Doro thy Loui se J o nes, East Texas State Teachers and Mill <>aps colleges, at home at 1110 North J e fferson, Ja ckson, Mi ss.; JAMES D. PEIRCE, AB, MD'4O , a nd Mi ss Ca roline Coffin , DePallw and the U niversity o f Wis consin, at home at 3272 Winthrop Ave nu e, In dianapolis; JO SEP H W_ STATZ, BS, and Miss Emiloui se Gerhard, D"Pauw. Births: Betty Claire to Mrs. J ohn Sem bower (TH ELMA HOHLT, AB) and Mr. SEM nO WEll, AB'34, pllbli c relations director of Indiana Stat e T eachers College; James Eng li sh to Mrs. Allen Laymon ( RUTH ENGLISH, AB ) a nti the R e v. Mr. LAYMON, AB , Fort Morgan, Colo.; Barry Edward to Mrs. Donald E. iVliller (BF.ATIlI CE E. ROEHM, AB) and Mr. MILLEIl, BS, C hi cago . 1937 Marriages: MAllY LO UISE SPENCER, AB, to H a melle Swit zer, at home in M onti cell o; V1Il GINJA ALLEN SAWYF:Il, AB, to William Henry Rohr, Jr., Blltler, o f H o uston , T ex.; iVIAIlG UE 1l1T.!: MITCHELL, AB , fonner art supervisor in Rochest e r sch ools, to Ro bert E. Frost, Purdue, at bome in West Lafay etIe, wh e re h e is re LU_ roman ces c ulminat ed in marriag e this summe r for ANN CUTSHALL , AB, and JAMES MELTON IVIENEfEE, '.39, Fort Wayne; Ell NEST RAYMOND BEAVEn, BS , MD'4O, and FRA NCES JEANNETTE CHAPMAN, '39, Indian apolis; MAllY ALICE SHIVF:LY, BS, and JOHN LYNN HonSON, BS , Palo Alto, Calif.; KATHEIlINE CHAIlLOTTE WEI SS, BS, and DAVID F. STO NE, BS'37, MD '39, 5345 Ea st Washington, Indianapo lis; OLGA ALENE BOWMAN, GN, former nurse in Indian a po lis Col ema n Hospit a l, and FRANK LIN G. R UD OLPH, BS'37, MD'39, 51 Elizab eth , Hammon d; PATSY JA NE TIlUEBLO OD, AB, and JOE D. BOIICHMAN, AB; LAWR ENCE O. Fllo BERG, AB, I.U. tutor in English, and RUTH LI NIJNEIl , '41 ; RICHAIlD F. DETAil, AB, and SHIRLEY DUNTEN, '42, Lafayette_ 1939 Set for early autumn is th e wedding o f MMIiLOU THOMAS, BS , and LEWIS D. MASON , '37. Other I.V. roman ces that end ed in mar riage this summer: GWENDOLYNE HILLI S, AB and GN, and D ,INIEL D. STIVER, BS'34, ?vlD'36, a ho use surgeon in the I .U. medical center, at ho me in South Bend, wh e re he has opened an offi ce; PEGGY JA NE CIlOSBY , AB , and A. WALTER HAMILTON, Jr., BS'36, LLB'36, Bluff to n att orney and W ells County proseclltor; M ARTHA E. O'NEAL, GN, surgery nurse in the Long Hospital, and WILLIAM VAN NESS, BS '38, MD'40, intern in St. Vincent's Hos pital, Indianapoli s; LOL ,' LENNOX, BS, and HE NIlY AUGUST LOHSE, BS, both tea ch ers in th e Indianapoli s schools ; B ETT Y AULT, AB, and TH OMAS R. WATTS, BS. Summ er weddings: MARTHA HESTEIl MULL, AB, to Stephen Hill Gutting, Purdue, at hom~ in N ew York City; MELVA LOHIlIG , GN, to Ha rry E. Spaulding, Butl e r student , at ho me at 3360 Guil{o rd Avenue; LAFAYETTE DANE BEAV ER, AB, distributor in Fort Wayn e for the AluminulIl Cooking Utensil Company, and Miss Linda Ri c hter, Luth er Institut e; JE ,\N KEIlN OIJ LE, AB, to William Alexander Rugg, of Boston, Unive rsity of N "w Hamp shire, at hom e in Atkin so n, N_H. ; MALCOLM HI CKS, BS, and Miss Marian Olson, o f Ham mond, at hom e in Hamm ond , where he is with the Inland S teel Compa ny; MARVI N R. DAVIS , MD, and Miss Martha L o ui se Bani ster, Ball S tat e Teachers College, former mu sic 29 supervisor in the Vevay schools, at home in Columbus; BllUCE H. MCCllACKEN, BS, and Miss Mary DeMont, of Plymouth, at home in Evansville; ROJlEHT E. SCULLY, BS, and Miss Martha Gross, at home in Bloomington, 320 South Dunn, where he is a draftsman in a stone mill; JOSEPH WATSON, BS, and Miss Harriett Morris, Purdue, at home in Muncie; JACK D. CARll, DDS, and Miss Marjory Louise Hennis, Butler, at home in Indianapolis; KENNETH M. SMAllTZ, AB, and Miss Tosca Guerrini, of Indianapolis, at home in Speno cer, where he is teaching. Paul V. McNutt (Continued from page 9) hall at the time. The roar of the galleries was deafening. The enthusiasm of a major part of the delegates on the floor was surprising to the Administrator's friends and foes alike. The band and the great organ used for whip ping up party spirit remained strangely quiet. Chairman Barkley tried to shut off the demon stration. No one, except the radio audience, heard him. From a six·months' tour of South America, including a trip np the Amazon, DONALD C. HAllIlIS, BS, has returned to Connersville to work for his father, according to JOHN HARRI· ~ON BHOWN, AB, of Indianapolis. 1940 ROBEIlT H. BOLLUM, BS, and NANCY MAY FJELD, '43, were married at Brazil, Ind., on Sept. 20. They are at home at 1413 E. Sunny mede in South Bend where he is employed by the Travellers' Insurance Company. DAVID B. RICHAllDSON, AB, former editor of the Indiana Daily Student, is now working for the New York Herald-Tribune. The School of Business announces new placements: CRAIG WALLACE BILLMAN, BS, auditor for the American Gas and Electric Service Corporation in South Bend; JULIA E. PECKINPAUGH, BS, secretary in the LU. Ex tension Center, Indianapolis; WALTER FIlANK SAGE, BS, accountant for the Allison Engineer ing Company, Indianapolis; C. LAWIlENCE TONEY, BS, accountant with the United Cities Utilities Company, Chicago, Ill. ANN FUHlIER, A B, has enrolled as :} resident student in the Katharine Gibbs School in New York City. WILLIAM Voss, LLB, received the Phi Delta Phi essay contest award of $200. JEAN Me GIlEW, AB, received a $375 scholarship to the University of Chicago law school. CAIlMEN COOK, AB, came back to Bloom ington this fall as Mrs. Robert E. Johnson. J OH 1'501', author of the 1939 Indianapolis Civic Theater prize-winning play, The Shel tered, is in school to finish his senior work. Wendell Willkic (Continued from page 7) the campus because, as she says: "I was always going to parties, and Wen dell never went to them." A fter his return from France, Willkie took a law position in Akron, Ohio, later becom ing one of the attorneys for the Northern Ohio Power and Light company. That was his introduction to the utilities business. In 1929, when Commonwealth and Southern was formed. he went to New York as its counsel. He became president of Common wealth and Southern in 1933, on the retire ment of B. C. Cobb and held that position uutil he accepted the nomination. Both his parents were practicing a\lorneys. Their home in Elwood resembled a town haJJ gathering. Visitors and neighbors continually dropped in for argument on current questions and debate l'eigned supreme. Along with this constant airing of ideas, a library reputed to have contained more than 6,000 volumes was at the disposal of the Willkie children. 30 Bob Haak, '39, retired from professional football this fall to open up a bowling alley ill Bloomington and 10 assist Bo in coaching the football team. Legend has it that the senior Willkie awoke his youngsters in the morning by shouting quotations from Shakespeare up the stairs. With such a background, it is no wonder Willkie created such an astonishing impres sion years later on the "Information Please" radio program. Besides the efforts of personal supporters such as HALLECK, SMITH, WILLIS COVAL, 'OS, ORLAND C. THOMPSON, '13, who stumped the West organizing Willkie-for-president clubs, three factors generally are credited with aiding the Willkie boom. The first was his radio de bate with Robert Jackson on the "Town Meet ing" program. The second was his article in Fortune magazine, "We, The People." The third, heard by nearly six million persons, was his appearance on "Information Please." On that night, Jan. 6, 1938, Willkie captured a sizable portion of the national imagination with his totally unexpected fund of humor and knowledge. A resume of part of the program should give the idea: CUFTON FADIMAN: Name the presidents during whose administrations the following expressions came into use. "Carpetbagger." WILI.KIE: President Andrew Johnson. FADIMAN: That's right, Mr. Willkie. What did the term carpetbagger mean? WILLKIE: It meant one who went South during the Reconstruction period who took along a carpetbag, which is a type of valise. He traveled into the SOllth as a northerner in order to obtain political power and advan tages during the Reconstruction in the South. Willkie also got the next one, which was "farm bloc." Fadiman turned on him with "you haven't been studying, have you?" "I wish I could," was the answer. The queries shifted to literature. "Give three quotations containing reference to April," said Fadiman_ "April showers bring May flowers," re sponded Willkie. "That's a simple one." "That's the only kind I know." In those words the directness and simplicity of Wendell Willkie reached six million Amer icans. And thus, direct and simple, stands Wendell Willkie today, a man of whom his University and his country are inordinately proud, not because of any position he has held or may hold, but becanse he is a real man and has proved himself. After 12 minutes of demonstration the smil ing, white-haired Administrator came to the platform to withdraw his name. The demon >3tration continued unabated. He could not make himself heard. "In the first place-," he shouted into the microphone. "No, no," yelled the crowd who already knew his inten tion. The demonstration continued. "We want McNutt; we want McNutt," screamed the galleries with wilder rhythm than a cheer leader can whip up at an Indiana-Purdue game. Here was a revolt that the convention managers had not anticipated. Neither had Administrator McNutt_ "This is the most dramatic momeut in reo cent political history," said the director of the Institute of Politics at one of the major universities to his companion. "You see be fore you a man with the nomination for the vice-presidency in his hand, if he will but raise that hand." iVIcNutt raised his hand but shook his head. "In the second place t hen-" lIe tried again, but his voice was lost in the chorus of "No! No!" The demonstra tion by both delegates and galleries left doubt in no one's mind that here was the man of the hom, the Democratic Party's favorite son at the moment. The Chicago Tribune re marked dryly next morning: "McNutt could have had the nomination by acclamation." "It would be ungracious if I failed to give some recogmtlOll to those who have sup ported me," McNutt was saying to the radio audience. Slowly the convention hall began to grow quiet. "Our party stands on the record of the past seven years. It goes to the people under the leadership of the great est peacetime President in the history of the nation. . . . America needs strong, logical, liberal, able leaders in the kind of a world we are living in today. . .. Franklin Delano Roosevelt is such a leader. He is my leader; and I am here to support his choice for vice·presidency." It would be both futile and unfair not to report the dissatisfaction with which many MeN utt backers greeted this decision. Manv felt that the Security Administrator had failed to seize power when it was literally beating at his door. Others felt that he had done the right, the sporting, "the good soldier" thing. All agreed on certain issues; that McN ult had the lion's share of the ovations from both delegates and galleries at the convention; that McNutt left the con vention a far more powerful and a more ad mired figure than when he entered it; that regardless of which party wins in November, here is a leader with a national backing that the administration in power can not ignore. As one who saw the proceedings of the 1940 Convention, there is no doubt in my mind that iVIcNutt will be for the next four years (FOR alone excepted) the Democrats' Favorite Son. The October 1940 Indianapolis alumni turned out Indianapolis Alumni Hear 80 McMillin on '40 Hopes INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 23-Bo McM illin , spea king at an alumni luncheon in the Co· lumbia Club here today, explained the new war cry of the LU. footb all team this year "Make your own breaks! " The Grayin' Colo~el said that he and hi s boys were tired o f waiting for the "breaks of the game" to come their way and were going out to make their own. A good crowd of Indianapolis alumni turned out for the meeting whi ch opened the 1940· 41 program for the Capitol City organiza· tion. Admitting that. Indiana has a more power· ful squad thi s fall, Bo also pointed out to th e alumni present that the 1940 schedule was a lot tougher than last year's. A flip of the coin is the only way to decide five of th e games, Bo explained, but he had no high hopes for th e othe r three games Ohio State, Nebraska and Northwestern . Bo feels that th e Hoosiers have an eve n chance with the others. Bo co ncluded hi s remarks by sayi ng, "We have a fine line this yea r. We have fine backfield material. We mu st make the breaks to win. The team ha s the fight and the determination." The other members of the LU. coaching staff were i ntroduce d at th e mee ting which was arranged under the direction of Harry L. Gause , Indianapoli s club president. Terre Haute Club Also Football-Minded TERRE HAUTE, Sept. 3-Football and Indiana's 1940 prospects provided the theme of the opening meeting of the Waba sh Valley Alumni Club for th e 1940-41 year as Robert Cook, new athletic publicity direc tor at LU., explained the outlook at an alumni banquet here tonight. Cook explained that although Bo McMillin felt that he had hi s finest squad since com· ing to LU. in 1934, still the sched ul e facing th e Hustling Hoosiers also wa s the toughest one arranged. The meeting was arranged by C. A. Banks, president of the club, with the assistance of Tennyson Edwards and Robert McPeak. Indiana Alumni Magazine Ln full force to hear Bo McMillin outline Indiana's 1940 foolball prospects. Wanted: ~Iore News ,Vith the opening of anoth e r year of activity for I.U. a.lumni clubs , th e e ditors of th e Magazille once more ask 'l h e presi. dents of the local alumni organizations to appoint official correspondents Jor their clubs and to send th e names to 1he managing editor. Then we will be able to carry regular reports on the aNivities of each club. Examining (Continued from page 12) of the Juni or yea r and is based upon th e student 's reco rd during his fre shma n and so phomore years." Specifically, it may be added that a "COO average in all of the student's University work is required for entrance into th e junior year and th e sa me average is required for graduation. It must not be thought, however, that students in the School of Business have no interests other than their courses. Every student in the School is a member of the Collegi a te Chamber of Commerce; the pur pose of this organization is to furth er the interest of the student., to promote co-opera ti on all(i und erstanding between the students a nd the faculty , a nd to foster activities which will result in closer relations with the bu si ness world. The activities of th e Chamber are plann ed and directed by a board of directors, whi ch is compo sed of elected represen tatives of the various groups a nd organizations of of the schooL Ed":ard L. Hutton, who grad uated from th e School of Business last lun e, is president of the National Association of Collegiate Chambers of Commerce. The national honorary frater nity, Beta Gamma Sigma, is to the School of Business what Phi Beta Kappa is to the College of Arts and Sciences. Students in the upper len per cent of th e senior class and those in the upper two per cent of th e junior class are eligible for elect ion to membership in th e fraternity. In order to strengthen the relationship be tween the School o f Business and th e bu si ness world of Indian a, 12 associate faculty members were appointed during th e past academic year. These men include leaders in every major field of co mmercial and industrial activity in the State: Paul N. Bogart, president, Indiana Bankers' Associa ti on; Fermor S. Cannon, president, Rail road men 's Federal Savings and Loan Asso ciation; Louis Ruth e nburg, president, Servel, Inc.; James F. Carroll, president, Indiana Bell Telephone Company; Charles B. Enlow, president, National City Bank o f Evansville; Ca rl F. Evel eigh, secretary of Eli Lilly and Company; C. S. Fletcher, sales manager, S tnd eba ker Corporation; Henry Holt, resi dent partner of Thomson and McK innon; F. C. Kroeger, manager, Allison En gineering Company ; Earl Moore, general superint e ndent of the Gary Works of th e Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation; A. J. McAndless. presi · nent. Lincoln Na tional Life In sura nce Com pany; and George S. Olive, presiden t, George S. Olive Company. Th ere are man y activities of the School of Bllsiness that deserve more extensive men tion than I ca n give th em here. For 15 years the Bureall of Business Research, under the direction of Professor George W. Starr, has se rved the community, and, by means of its monthly Indiana Bnsiness Re·view, ha s made it s finding s available to the bll si ness world. A more recent creation, the Investme nt Re search Bureau lInder the nirection of Dr. Harry C. Sallvain ha s been operating sin ce 1937; it, too, issues a monthly pnblication, the I nveslmenl BulletLn. The School of Business has been active in fostering conferences of represe ntatives of variolls kind s of business; during the past yea r more than 1,000 persons all ended such con ferences. It is my impression that those in charge of the Indian a U niversity School of Business are flllly aliv e to their respon sibi liti es, are keenly aware hoth of their opportunities and of their obl igations. I believe that no part of Indi ana University is doing a better job, both in th e primary field of edu cation and in the secondary field of service to the State, than is being done by the School of Business. Don't Forget Homecoming! Oct. 18-19 Iowa vs. Indiana Be There Whell I.he FUll Starts :31 WITH the start of another University year we again ex tend a personal invitation to you to take part in the great alumni work of our Greater University. Thousands of alumni are meeting regularly at alumni club meetings. Worthwhile and interesting projects are be ing undertaken by these clubs. Those now You Are participating get a "big kick" out of their Invited actIvIty . You, too, can get the thrill of sharing the satisfaction of helping our great president, Herman B Wells, the Trustees, the faculty, and our loyal alumni to achieve our immediate goal-to make Indiana University not necessarily the biggest university In the cou ntry , but the best! ONE of the most encouraging of many encouraging de velopments at Indiana University has been the progress made in student guidance work. Dr. Herman T. Briscoe, newly-appointed dean of fa culties, has developed consider able attention to this vital problem and with the aid of other faculty members has Creating set up an effective organization to help '44 Alumni students. Among other things stressed in the program is the vital process of making good alumni of the students while they are still in college. Professor Julian Scott Bryan, Counsellor of Students, in remarks to the faculty advisers, had this to say: "Wher ever you find a loyal and enthusiastic college alumnus, you will, in all probability, dist:over that his loyalty is directly attributable to deep affection for some old teacher. If you don't believe this, take stock of the hundreds of endowed chairs in the colleges and universities of this nation- chairs established 'in loving memory of an old teacher.' ~! e need more strong, loyal alumni, but we cannot create a loyal alumnus out of an undergraduate who is per mitted from the day that he lands here as a scared, home sit:k freshman, to live off in some little two-by-twice room by himself, for four long years, unloved, unbefriended , and uninvited! " Also in his remarks, Professor Bryan commented on the educational process by minimizing the importance of hav in g students indefinitely retain factual details learned in th ei r courses but rather he advised, "We should, however, be deeply concerned that he develop valuable habits of thought, t:apture high ideals, and acquire a high type of self-reliance. These valuable traits cannot be captured if he fails to do his academic work well!" This whole student guidance program shows that the University is not only interested in physical growth but spiritual growth as well. It is a trend that will help build the truly Great University. THERE t:omes a time when dear and co ncIse definition of policy becomes necessary. We are speaking out now, not to defend or condone our position, but rather to explain what we are attempting to do in an extremely un usual circumstant:e. We have always felt, and always will feel, that the value of the Concerning l.U. Alumni Association and of the Univer Politics sity would be impaired seriously whenever special favor is shown to either major political party. We take pride in the fact that both Demo crats and Republicans forget their political differences and unite whenever the welfare of Indiana University is con cerned . If you know your Indiana politics you can un derstand our pride in this unique achievement of getting non -pa rtisan response from some of the most partisan of all political individuals-Hoosiers. How~ver, for the first time in the history of the Uni versity a graduate of LU. has been nominated for the President:y of the United States by one of the major parties. Also, another alumnus was one of the outstanding cand idates for the nomination by the other party. As alumni, both men are written up in this issue. We compli ment both of these men on the distinction that their great ability has won for them, but the Alumni Association re affirms its established policy of refusing to support or op pose the candidacy of any individual running for public office. You personally are free to be just as actively partisan as you care to be. Laying aside all partisan considerations, all alumni of Indiana University should be proud of Wendell L. Willkie and Paul V. Mt:Nutt-the two most outstanding class mates of any university ever to figure prominently in the national political battle scene-two loyal friends of In diana University. CITIZENS LOAN and TRUST CO. ::.:: GENERAL BANKING ALUMNI BOUQUET SHOP Keep in Touch With Indiana Students and FLORISTS Faculty WASHINGTON a t FIFTH through the Bloomin gton ROY O. PIKE, '00, Pres. RED BOOK • 1940-41 Edition Out A Welcome for I.U. AblJuui Awaits You! About October 15 They're Grinning Because . .. • They're go ing to get a de licious meal! • They're goi ng where they will meet their friends! • In other words, they enjoy going to . . . • MaiJed to Alumni 50c Postpaid • Published by the University The Y.M.C.A. Gables s. Indiana Ave. N ow Celebrating Its GRAHAM DOTEI.. P. C. Gilliatt, Prop. BLOOMINGTON, IND. Golden UNIVERSITY CHEVROLET CO., Inc. FIFTIETH While In Bloomington YEAR Eat at of STONE'S CAFE 324-328 S. Walnut St. Service to Indiana "Good Food Since 1924" E. B. DU ANE, Pres. University 327 Woodlawn Ave. We want your telephone service to be good and quick and cheap. But there's more to it than that. We want it to be courteous too. No matter what the occasion, there's always time for a cheery "please" and a pleasa nt word of thanks. That is the Bell System way. It is one of the fine tradi tions of the telephone business. BELL 'rELEPHONE PREPA~EDNESS-THE PART IN THE SYSTEM BELL SYSTE}[ IS PREPARED TO DO ITS N _\1'ION'S PIl.OGR .·\ }[ OF NATIONAL DEFENSE