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Publications
Arbutus...
Editor-in-chief Margy Boyd
The Arbutus flower was first found here by Hermann B. Boisen in the Fall of 1877. After naming the flower as the "dearest of all," he christened the hill on which it was found "Arbutus Hill." The profusion of trailing arbutus which grew on its slopes in the Springtime was not to be found anywhere else in the state.
The "Brown County of the '20s," "Arbutus Hill" attracted multitudes to its fragrant grounds. The bygone popularity of "Arbutus Hill" has carried through the years with this annual, which bears its name.
Managing Editor . . . Pat Smith Business Manager . . . George Held
Office Managers . . . Marilyn Cotton and Georgelma DeVault.
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Scheduling Editors . . . Dottie Gaskins and Nancy Sprague;
Assistant to the Editor . . . Laurie Davis. Sports Editor . . Dan Thomasson; Activities Lditor . . . Mike Brutton; Schools and Administration Editor . . . Jack Taylor.
Photography Editor . . . Carl Purcell.
...Editors and...
More room . . . we've got a little more room now . . . adjoining darkrooms tool
We've raced in high gear right up to the publication date attempting to bring Indiana University what we believe as the greatest Arbutus ever printed.
Glued fingernails and migraine headaches are but temporary thorns relieved soon by the ultimate gratification of a completed signature or returned page proofs. Finally the last picture is taken, the last corrected proof is returned to the printers . . . presses roll, pages are sewed together, 31 signatures are bound between covers and delivered to YOU!
The book is yours to leaf through . . . to reminisce, to dream. Yours to show to friends, Mom and Dad, a girl back home. Yours to shelve, to gather dust, to be opened again when an old classmate drops by. Shelved and opened again, its corners evidence the years of wear . . . but it's still yours!
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Assistant Campus Life Editor . . . Norma Neukam; Copy Editor . . . Kathie Neff; Campus Life Editor . . . Dottie Williams.
Residence Editor . . . Alice Atkinson; Senior Editor . . . Marshall Ruchman; Research Editor . . . Nancy Boyd.
Mounting Editors . . . Sally Truitt and Carolyn Hood; Layout Editor . . . Joline McVicker; Assistant Layout Editor . . . Marilyn McDonald.
Circulation Managers, Nancy Cochran and Gretchen Risk.
Advertising Manager . . . Bill Powell; Reprint Sales Manager Ron Yeneti(h. Assistant Business Managers, Dave Hanna and Al Rachles.
......Managers
Contracts Manager . . . Lou Mervis; Promotion Manager . . • Sandy Sallach; Treasurer . . Ron Kovener.
The "Chiefs" . . . Don Young, Peggy Cook, and Al Bolin.
Daily Student
"Where's today's Student?" a familiar question across breakfast tables, in chow lines, and over Commons coffee. Students and faculty reach for the Indiana Daily Student as naturally as they reach for that second cup of coffee. Inspired journalism students use this campus news outlet as a training ground for careers in writing and editing.
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Seated are Ginny Krause, Assistant Managing Editor, and Susie Wallace, Managing Editor. Standing are Tom Fleming, Assistant Managing Editor, Jerry Lyst, Managing Editor, and John Stevens, Editor of Editorial Page.
Night Editors on the rim are Dan Thomasson, Chuck Leslie, Lynn Sproatt, and Bill Chumley. Bill Freyberg is seated in the center.
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Associate Editors: Vance Clark, Ann Porter, and Don Finney
Photographer, Carl Purcell; Woman's Editor, Helen Mosbrook; Sports Editor, Dick Ronth and Associate Editor, Marty Anderson.
What ... another "fanny" piece?
The Indiana Daily Student has a new home this year. Clean, bright, solid desks, good lighting, space, and still more space. The rumble of the presses below . . . the tick of the teletype . . . the seldom-ceasing clack of typewriters . . . all combine to create the excitement necessary for journalism at its peak. The City Room holds this excitement.
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City editors seated are Phil Fox and Kathie Neff, standing are Dick Hopper, John Rutherford, and Bill Freyberg.
Crimson Bull
Those who look at the staid walls of the Journalism Building little dream of the monstrous forces hard at work within this fine edifice. For here are cloistered those whose insidious propaganda has penetrated deep into the fibre of IU's youth. Here work those who dare to call themselves—THE STAFF OF THE CRIMSON BULL.
Though small in number, the staff members' influence is felt far. Where men of distinction gather, be it the faculty room of the English building, or the dining halls of the Quadrangle, the Crimson Bull is the unavoidable subject of conversation.
An example of the co-operation and democracy the modest Bull editor, Clint Major, has instilled in the organization.
Row I: Clint Major (Editor-in-Chief), Joe Winters (Art Editor), Carl Purcell (Photo Editor). Row II: Don Packard, Nancy Clegg, Bill Threadgill, Julie Wagnor, Tom Barton, Shirley Fields, Mary Ann Shanks, Mimi Nollau, Danny Powers, Paul Hansman.
Left to right: Bruce Olson, Sue Baxter, John Hagopian, Sue Jospe, Barry Spacks, Ed Clark.
Barry Spacks goes over material for the Folio with Ed Clark.
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Folio
Folio, published three times each year, is an important part of Indiana University. The staff of the Folio is made up of volunteer students who have a literary leaning. Editors are always graduate students, while the editorial staff consists of undergraduates. At the staff meetings material is selected for use in the magazine.
Folio has been sold in other parts of the country this year for the first time. In its attempt to reach out nationally, Folio publishes the works of many well-known writers. The Folio naturally includes writings by Indiana University students. The Daniel Sherwood Memorial Prize of fifty dollars is given each year to the student submitting the best poem to the Folio.
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athletics
We see our athletic teams win; we see them lose. They are as much a part of the University as books and classes. They are the spirit of a vibrant youth, combining education and recreation to a successful end. This year I.U. was defeated often on the field of play. But with these losses came the realization that to win isn't everything. The fan too often judges the worth of a team by how much it has won, and sometimes forgets the words of Granny Rice, "It's how you play the game." The old master was never more right. We are proud of our athletes, because we know that our teams played the game right.
Sometime walk into the dressing room of a losing team. Sense the silence that prevails, look at the athletes and see the weariness in their eyes, but also notice the determination in their silence . . . the determination not to quit but to go ahead and give it their all again the next time.
To our coaching staff, to our athletes, to our colleagues, we say look with pride at the Cream and Crimson. Hold your heads high. We lost a few. So what? We were never actually defeated.
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The Athletic Board
Li iI TO RIGHT: James Strickland, Lee Norvelle, John Mee, Edward Edwards, John Taylor, William Breneman.
I.U.'s athletic board is composed of seven faculty members and three alumni representatives, under the chairmanship of John F. Mee. The men chosen to serve on this board are selected by President Wells each year. As chairman of the board Mr. Mee is I.U.'s representative in the Big Ten. This year Frank Allen, former I.U. trustee, was chosen as the University's new Athletic Director. Mr. Allen fills the position left open by Paul Harrell who resigned a year ago to take over as head of the University's building program.
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