Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1949 — Page 33
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SUNDAY, OCT. 16, 1949
TTY ’ Cali on
Library Groups
By HENRY BUTLER erence | oi Br: Kenneth P. Williams has no {I-
Richard E. Banta easy.
{math professor, known on the More than 500 members of the Bloomington campus as “K.P.” Indiana Library and Indiana Li-SPent all last summer brary Trustees’ associations are 87% ihe Civil War, which to attend the annual'wj) publish Nov. 1. joint conference of the two or-| (pder the title “Lincoln Finds ganizations Thursday throughly General” -the forthcoming Saturday in the Lincoln Hotel. 1000-page two-decker will be Richard E. Banta, author of the/only about half the completed recently published book “The work Dr. Williams has in mind. Ohio,” will speak in a dinner meeting at 7 p. m. Friday. Robert A. Miller, Bloomington, president of the Indiana Library Association, is that the first two volumes con will preside. tain only brief mention of Grant. Local arrangements for the That's a point Dr. Williams wants conference are under the direction emphasized. | of Hazel B. Warren, Indiana State! “The only way to make clear Library. why Grant was selected is to expeSommittee rion, mye Jnclyde Eiiza-|plain the war up to that point,” Beth Bion, Ordnance ii ot he says, adding that the necessit Erp eine Milk, Jodi Sat for thoroughness got him in Sane nn Ratold Sanders, business lvolved in much more work than Hi Tieaner Peters erson, 1nd LAY ta io/he'd originally planned. ALY, an aroline nn, iam “I really don’t know why anywHERry Sith 3 one] 1istary {body wants to write a book. It's A "” he ‘International Relations’ aa Aurel 100+ he ave.
| AND Yer the Civil War is the Is Faculty Club Topic easiest modern war to study, he “International Relations™
be the theme of the Butler Uni-/ pact. The entire government mili-
What may puzzle some readers
versity Women's Faculty Club! tary reports on both sides occupy
meeting at 3 p. m. Wednesday in only some 140 volumes. the School of Religion lounge. | “I didn't have to go out and Miss Barbara Dearing, Butler gather material in unlikely junior, will discuss the work on| Places, ” Dr. Williams says. Save the United Nations. Foreign-born|for occasional trips to Washingstudents will be guests at the ton, Baltimore and elsewhere to meeting. Mrs. Virginia Graves|look through official papers, his Brunson is I hostess chairman. research involved no no dredging in
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»
ee same
egorrecting proofs of a two-volume work on MacMillan
will hastens to add. Records are com- g
"History i is my hobby" . of mathematics at Indiana Univers a General,"
on the two World Wars.
Possibly the main reason why po
the Civil War seems increasingly’ attractive to historians is this very compactness of material. Dr. {Williams explains it by pointing {out that Civil War officers, from | generals down to lieutenants, ® {wrote their own reports, cor- | respondence and orders.
Miss Ellen Laughlin of Colum-!members are Miss Joan Bennett. Monii- Complete! “us, Ind., who used to teach |§sho pind Miss Juliann Wills. 130 Pendle: attic haircloth trunks for bundles professor at Urbana Junior Col-|English at IU and whom he mar-| dune, a TY ane urs. | WA rame of old letters. The material is|lege. His father's enthusiasm for fied in 1920, he lives close to the Golympis, City. vice president, Miss Jule, Picture! Sampus, He admits being “a kind | hl Moore," 5005 N. el nots st. |of railroad fan,” enjoyi : Williams’ current study. on railroads, even nloving books SEH repr doit arty aia Call | With an A. B. and A. M. from IU, wot time for much railroad travel. | Melis Mary Ann Poyst New Castle | Order N X-0n joined the faculty in 1909, took, He's also, he says, “an end-of-|pichmont. ned Sick IL For Christmas! = ve a Princeton Ph. D. in 1913, and the-geason baseball fan” and | Winona: LA at ebancit ad Bes . WALL SCONCE es the theater and ‘good! Georgian ans Richardson, Anderson. social remained In the TU math depart- movies, though he doesn’t go “"*=As. TE ASH TRAY omething different and lovely ment, subsequently heading it for often. Fr ie Martino Plans Cemovasle. crystal Af HY) has vom wall—one shoe oroized a while. | His reception of the idea of be-| Fou cal het NEN ‘3IWare Keep arrangements. In. 1915, he enlisted in the 1st 8 8 Miclographied fof thas story Spanish Institute $1.95 $7.95 ¥ aracteristic in a way Indiana Infantry, National Guard, nis students. w Frank L. Marto, Indianapolis Book Ends—$12.95; Single Shoa—$3.50, Pair—$5.95
|get a tremendous personal touch! in all that official correspondlence,” he says, with a scornful | attitude towards the enormous in- | crease in paper-work which all | ex- -GI's sadly know as red tape. “Civil War officers had to write that way, simply because they were overworked and had to watch details as well as big de-| cisions,” Dr. Williams explains. |
» ” ” | ALL THIS INTEREST in mili-/ | tary history may weem strange in |a man who, according to legend, | came to Bloomington as a student | “because then they didn't have | military training at IU.” Dr. Williams likes to repeat the. | story, but he admits it's not the! (only explanation of why he chose | TU. His interest in astronomy | was another reason, and so was a strong recommendation of IU from some Hoosiers he met in his home state of Ohio. He was born in Urbana, O., in
1887, the son of a mathematics
To HELP PROTECT
You...Your Family...Your Property...Your Business
IRE —
FRO
DAY AND
NIGHT
In Indianapolis and Vicinity
. Dr. Kenneth P. Williams, professor
and author of "Lincoln Finds
which Macmillan will publish Nov. 1.
igathered. It's all readily avail- | U. 8. Grant is perhaps a factor) able, much more so than material | in Dr.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Math Professor Makes History a Hobby
ol
PAGE 33
SY former Indianapolis’
meer = Officers Named This Army stretch-!
Dentistry, Nursing Units Also Elect
ay Sfficets for the 1949-50. pau) J. Courtney, assistant the Indiana University Schools of pastor of St. Mary's Catholic Medicine and Dentistry and the! Church. Father Courtney will ex School for Nurses.
ing through the.two World Wars, | powerfully revived and stimu-| lated the Civil War interest his ‘father had inspired in him. “The whole Civil War needs reappraisal in terms of den military doctrine,” he sa But until 1944, — he got the current work under way, history
y 8. 8 DR. WILLIAMS *
cluded such items as monographs ; Raymond L. Newnum may on “Transits of Mercury” and “A | e, secretary-trensurer. What Could Comparison of the Solar Theories | (Way, president; rvin Green Norris. B M of Newcomb and Le Verrier” and, , vice dent, and Miss Naida e ore a book on “The. Calculation of iressurer o> ore Liberty, Secrstani-} poiceless Orbits of Asteroids and Comets | School of Dentistry officers are: Tha besides some classroom. texts. | or, tlass—H, T, Be vg n rug an rear orn, ERE EEL Be | Keeping Dr. Williams has been teaching! Lo Hols od Lishe, New BABY’S regularly, and still is giving! ¥ p RE class—Alden B gihgmpson, Hebcourses in the mathematically, president: John R
theory of finance, beo - |icees” y nance, analytical m KF 2% hard Rushville, treasurer. StuIt council representatives are Howard a dianola Ave;
etry and calculus.
He has his schedule arranged (4 Tote. Wabash,
for afternoon teaching. That gives him long mornings for his-'v torical work.
“I've decided there are. two R. Revnolds
kinds of people: Stay-uppers and
get-uppers. I'm a get-upper—al-°
ways have been,” he says. Getting up, he cagily intimates, may, be anywhere from 3 to 5 a. m,
IU Medical Class toon of Wor Pins i
School of Medicine
Lane, vice Beet Carrollton Ave. sec
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ephemore class—Wilbur
la Ave. president: 1] a vs llivan, vice president; Raymond Rothhaar. A Ah, secretary. i PICTURE MOUNT, y alsam Av eo r Leonard G Lawion 4181 Park Ave. and With Your John ret, Marion Ave, student coun-
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+ Miss
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