Arbutus . pool, smallgymnasium, billiard room, bowling court, reading room, loung-ing room and various other conveniences for men students. Students, alumni, ex-students, members of the faculty andmembers of the board of trustees are eligiljle to memberslup inthe Union. After the opening of the new rooms the total mem-bership was about four hundred and fifty, Init it is expected tohave over five hundred members by the end of the term. Four meetings a year are provided for l)v the constitutionand every one is expected to be made highly worth some big man will address each of these


Arbutus . pool, smallgymnasium, billiard room, bowling court, reading room, loung-ing room and various other conveniences for men students. Students, alumni, ex-students, members of the faculty andmembers of the board of trustees are eligiljle to memberslup inthe Union. After the opening of the new rooms the total mem-bership was about four hundred and fifty, Init it is expected tohave over five hundred members by the end of the term. Four meetings a year are provided for l)v the constitutionand every one is expected to be made highly worth some big man will address each of these meetings orother amusement i)articularly adapted to mans fancy will holdthe boards. Various other meetings of common interest havebeen held under the aus])ices of the Lnion. 163 % TME^ ARBUTUS / ^ NINETEEN T E N ^ /j ^m Ofificers are elected to hold for a year, from one May untilthe next, and the following is the list which will direct the des-tinies of the organization for the coming term : John M. Whit-. tenberger, president; Dean L. Barnhart, first vice-president;Ralph V. Sollitt, second vice-president; John C. Mellett, secre-tary ; Robert E. Neff, treasurer; President William L. Bryan, faculty member of the board of directors; Uz McMurtrie,alumni member of the board of directors; Albert Guy Brenton,George W. Henley, jr., Earl Hudelson, Julian J. Kiser, SamuelA. Swayne, Cecil F. Whitehead, Claude Whitney, OHce Win-ters, student members of the board of directors. Before the Union became a part of the student life, therewas no real center of interest for all of the men students of theUniversity. There was no common organization where meet and work toward the same great aim of seeing tothe betterment of all University institutions and look after thewelfare of the student body in general. The Indiana Union supplies a real need to the large Universities have such organizations and in almostevery case it is found that the institution and the student bodyar


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectuniversitiesandcolle