Minnesota Alum.nus

46 September, 1946 No.1 M INNESOT.\ AL ':-11\ c\

-----'Ita:.. ____ ------1 Minnesota Transition from War to Peace ALUMNUS T HE pre en t chool year mark , lud nt rooming fa iliti in th 111- the beginning of a new ra in v I' it)' ar a taxed to the aturation Continuing the Minnesota Alumni Week­ th e hi tory of the ni er it , of Min­ point a larg r p rc ntage f the ly which was established in 1901. Pub­ nota. The tory of the in titution tudent body than ever b fore will lished by the General Alumni Association from the holdi ng of the fir t cla ses li ve at some di tance from th e cam­ of the University of Minnesota. 205 Coff­ at the college level in eptember of pu . In I'd r to" t full utilization of man Union. Member of the American 1869 to the pre ent tim i a continu­ xisting cia room and laboratory fa­ Alumni Council. ing one but certain events or change iIi ti e , clas e will b sch duled in the life of the niversity or of the from eight o'clock in the mornmg ociety of which it i a part ma be until late in the evening. Vol. 46 September, 1946 No.1 8ingled out a marking the beginning or the end of an epoch. The illl]le t 1 On th e a ademic ide th ere i the problem of e uring an adequate staff WILLIAM S. GIBSON '27, Editor and most obviou way of Ii ting the date of uch period is to have them of comp ten t teachers. I n the face of RUTH GUSTAFSON '40Ed, Editorial Asst. coincide with the administration of the 111a en rollment th re i al 0 the the pre idents of th niver it). determination of the niver it)' of good ca e might be made for uch a Minne ota to maintain it high a a­ General Alumni Association division p pecially from the tand­ clemic tandard and to continue at DR. GEORCE A. EARL '06 ; '09Md. pres­ point of general administrative policy a traditi nail high level it r earch ident; RALPH B. BEAL '18, vice-president; and al o in view of th fact that na­ program and the tate-wid pro"ram ARNULF UELAND '17, treasurer; E. B. of ducational ervic . The po_lllar PIERCE '04, executive secretary. ti onal and world event of maj'or so­ cial and educational ignificance enrollmen t I ill a\-o have it effe t Board of Directors have had a way of coinciding \ ith on admini trative organizati on. ad­ Honorary: THOS. F. WALLACE '95L, the inauguration of Minne ota pre i­ mis ion and instructional require­ CHAS. F. KEYES '96, EDCAR F. ZELLE '13. dent. ment. Th re pon ibilitie on the admini trati e ide are b Ol11in" Representing Colleges: Science, Lit­ erature, and the Arts: Lill ian Mayer Fink The fir t year of the admini tration greater than ver before. '18, Mary Shepardson ')8. Institute 0/ of Dr. J. 1. Morrill wa certainly a Technology: Ru sse ll Backstrom '25. Theo­ momentou one for the nited tate in liege and dore W. Bennett '31. Agn'culture, Fo res­ and for all the peoples of th world. enrollmen t is mor than a try and Home Economics: Lucy Ashenden It ha been wid ly h raIded a the It reflect th e in­ lacobson '19, William E. Petersen '16; of th Law School: 10hn K. Fesler '26, Paul S. begi nning of the atomic age and hi - Carroll 'lB. Medical School: Dr. Douglas torian will asse s and comment upon P. Head '27, Dr. Harold Benjamin '34. many other signifi ant ending and Dentistry: Dr. Bert H. Kerr '12, Dr. L. W. beginnings. Thorn '15. Pharmacy: Charles V. Netz '20. Education: Clarence E. Blume '39Gr. Business: Frank J. Tupa '21. Mines: On the campus of the Walter H. Parker '07. School of Agricul­ of Minne ota, and on oth er ampu e ture: 1. B. Bassett. throughout the nati n, the pa t 'ear Directors-at-Iarge: Dr. W. H. Aur­ wa one of tran ition. The change­ and 'OlMd, Carroll K. Michener '07, Ar­ over from th wartime to the pO_til ar nold C. Oss '21, Ben W. Palmer '11; '13L, educati onal cene may not ha eben George A. Pond 'lBAg, Arthur B. Fruen ff cted completel but it wa during 'OBE, Harry Gerri h '05E, Rewey Belle the past ear that the training-for­ Inglis 'OB, Orren E. Safford '101. war pr gram wa di mantled and the District Directors: First District: Dr. pattern utlin wa e tabli h d for Alexander E. Brown '22Md, Rochester. Ninth District: Dr. W. L. Burnap '97, Fer­ th coming year. t thi tim a year gus Falls. a"o t.h r IV re more than 1,500 arm)' and navy trainee on th campu. B [ore th chool year wa over the THE COVER PICTURE ervice trainee had depart d and th View of Northrop Memorial Auditorium. ivilian enrolLl1 ent had jump d from a I artim low of om e en tho ll ­ The Minnesota Alumnus Is published monthly from September through June. sand to an all-tim high of more than our es? Entered as second class matter at the 1 .000. post office at Minneapolis. Minnesota, un­ der act of Congress of March 3. 1879. Sub­ t- scription. $3 a year. 11 On the ph ical sid thL udd n IC any sub crib r wi he hi magazine onru h of student ha re ult d in- di continu d at the expiration of hi sub­ evi tably in overcrowding_ Il ith 'on- a n II cription, noti e to that e(Ject hould be qu nt ten ions, in th la _r om, nt with the sub criptioll or at it expira­ th laborat l')', and th e dOl' l11itor tion. Otherwi e it i under tood that a continuance i d ired. and oth I' p lace of r . id n e. With Minnesota ALUMNUS

Vol. 46, No. 1 September, 1946

Enrollment of 21 1000 Is Expected

ORMAL time the que tion The student hou ing bureau ha tead of eight-thirty and cIa se and I mo t often a ked at thi time of conducted an aggre ive campaian to laborator group will till be in e­ the year concerning the early fall ac­ expand it Ii ting of room and other ion after dark in orne campu build­ tivitie on the campu i : What kind hou ing facilitie and an appeal to ing. of a football leam i Minne ota going alUInni in the Twin Citie for a i t­ The tudent hou ing and cIas room to ha e? ance ha been made through the Gen­ problem are only pha es, although Intere t in football hereabout i eral Alumni ociation. volunteer important one to be me, of the hou ing committee of 100 tudent returning to a prewar level but the over-all re ponsibilit r of the niver­ major que tion being asked by alum­ made per anal call at 5 000 home in sity in meeting the greatly increased ni and other i : How i the niver- a hou e-to-house canva ing project demand for educational service. In­ it going to handle the unprecedent­ directed by the tudent hou ing volved in the total ituation are a ed load of ome 22,000 tudent thi bureau. In mid- eptember there wa thou and and one admini trative de­ fall? till an e-timated shortaae of hou ing tails plus problems of in truction and for 1,200 ingle men, 1,000 married Minne ota ha adopted the policy upply of equipment. The regi tra­ couple, and 500 ingle, omen. that all qualified re ident of the tate tion procedmes for the more than who eek to enter the University will 10.000 veteran and the upplying of be admitted. Emergency mea me Problems hooks and other equipment to these are being taken by the administration men and \ omen under the provi ions In Pioneer Hall. dormitor for to provide cIa room facilitie and in- of the G.1. Bill con titute a maj or men, a total of 925 men will be ac­ truction for all \ ho come. dvance ta k. It rna he impo ible to ecme commodated thi year in tead of 536 regi tralion for the fall quarter wa enough copie of certain textbooks a previou I through the u e of tarted on ugu t 1 and by mid- ep­ at the beainning of the fall quarter. double-deck bed. There i dormi­ tember, E. ummers, dean of ad­ R. tory pace for 150 men in Memorial mi ion and record , announced that hortage and overcrowding may tadium. Dormitor pace in the the enrollment had pa ed the 16 000 bring poradic tudent complaints as women s residence Com tock and mark. The peak enrollment figure the year proo-re e, but alUInni may anford Hall ha been expanded a before the war was approximately be sure that the ni er it i making far a po ible. With a normal capa­ 15.600. La t pring the ni ersity e er po ihle effort to provide edu­ city of 276, Com tack now hou e official mad plan for the fall on the cational opportunit for all Minne- 378 women, and anford, normally ba i of an enrollm nt of 21,600 and ota resident \ ho eek entrance and housing 245, can care for 275 re i­ the advance regi tration indi at d to maintain a high tandard of in­ dent. Cooperati e cottage offer ac- tru tion in keeping , ith the Minne­ that the enrollm nt might go beyond ommodation for 150 , omen. thi total. Thou and of application ota tradition. for admi,sion from non-re ident of the state have been rej cted. Community Study Rooms for Students tud of public health and med­ ical care in Red Wing and Goodhue In addition to th job of pro iding count ha been publi hed by the ufficient la sro m faci liti and Uni er it of iinne.,ot'l Pre a the teacher th niversity ha al con­ tenth in it 'Red Wing eries' of cern d it elf with the ta k of ecuring booklet d voted to a general sur e living a ommodation for the re ord of the communit ba i for postwar number of tudent. Thi ta k ha planning. been mad more complicat d by th fact that a larg number of th vet- uthor of thi eran ar married and also b th Th erie are Ph r1li P. Harri , in truc- fact that th ratio of tudent tor of publi h alth at th niver it from out ide th Twin Citie ha in­ and Ruth E. Boynton, niversity pro­ crea ed from 40 p rcent in 1941 to fe or of public health. 60 perc nt thi ear. at Th' omprehen iv anal ~ is of the 4 MINNESOTA ALUMN S

Red Wing community which include tudie by niver ity pecialist of the chool, economic , ocial service agencies, churche , food habits and art in addition to public health will be summarized in a final pamphlet this fall by Profe sor Roland Vaile, chaim1an of the project. Summer Graduates More than 300 received degree at the econd ummer e ion com· men ement exerci es in the ballroom of Coffman nion on Augu t 29. Thi wa the fir t time that a regular Uni· ver ity commencement program had been held ill the nion. Pre ident J. L. Morrill conferred the degree and the commencement address wa given by B. M. Chri tensen, president of Aug burg College.

School by Radio The formal presentation of the Medal of Freedom to Dr. Harold G. Deutsch. pro­ fessor of history. was made on the campus this summer by Col. R. A. Ericson of the When chool in the Twin Citie University's department of military science and tactics. The War Department award delayed their opening two week be· was made to Dr. Deutsch for his services as chief of several agencies with the Re· cause of the polio epidemic, the ni· search and Analysis Branch. Office of Strategic Services. in England. France and ver ity radio station KUOM broad­ Germany. from February. 1944. to September. 1945. ca t a erie of classroom features' triction on recruiting and the giv- ct at the n iversity will b Dr. John for tuden t from the kindergarten ing of financial aid to athlete. T. Tate, Dr. John H. William and through high choo!. The radio in­ It \ a propo ed that athletea Dr. !fred O. c.. ier, all taff mem- structi on programs were supervised hould not be paid, by direct or indio bers of th phYSIC departm n~. by Betty Girling, program produc­ rect mean because of athletic abili- Dr. Tate IS well known for hIS work tion director of the station. During ties and that athletic officials hould on the perfection of ubmarine detec­ the voluntary quarantine of Twin not beat the bu hes for pro pective tion d vic while conn cted with the City children because of the polio college tars. Office for cie~ tifi c Re earch and D.e- epidemic throughout July and Au­ In the Western Conference and in velopm nt during the war. Dr . WI1- gu t, tation KUOM prepared and some other college conference there !iam and ie!' were a ociated d~I­ broadcast daily entertainment pro­ are rules which forbid the member mg the war WIth the Manhattan DI - grams for young people. of athletic departments to make the trict in the deve!opment. of the atom.ic initial move in inviting prep chool bomb. Dr. ler attained fame In Athletic Problem athletes to a college campu. The cientific fields in 1940, ~hen he coaches and other athletic official are wa fir§t to eparat UranJUm-235, The eagerness of many colleges allowed to direct information to a po- a. tep es entia~ to the la~er work and universities to make an imme­ tential tudent after the initial request whIch resulted In the atomIC ?omb. diate postwar comeback in intercolle­ has come from him The study to be conducted In the giate sports has brought about an in­ . Univer ities laboratorie will follow crease in the recruiting and subsidiz­ two major cour es: ing of promising athletes. This sit­ Atom Research 1. The scattering af)d interaction uation wa the top of heated discus­ A grant of $73,025 has been made of fundamental particle, protons and sion at meetings of coaches and ath­ by the avy department to the ni­ neutron, and the combination of letic directors held during the past versity of Minnesota for the purpose those particle in the lighter element, ummer. Athletic conference uch of financing basic re earch by Uni­ helium and hydrogen. as the Big Ten which have banned ver ity cientists in the field of nu­ 2. eparation of the isotype of the ub idization of athletes in the clear or atomic physic. variou elements in order to tud pa t were anxious to halt the trend Made through the avy' Office of their nu lear propertie . before exce e bring about a disrup­ Re arch and Invention the grant i The Univer ity phy ici ts empha- tion of intercollegiate athletic rela­ intended to provide for the intensive ized that the work th y will do under tion hip. study of problems in the atomic field the avy grant has no dire t military At a meeting of the National Colle­ for one year in the laboratories of the application but rather will b devoted giate Athletic a ociation in Chicago Univer ity's phy ic d partment. Be­ to pur re earch in th ph nomena of in July, the repre entative of more cau e of the long-rang a pect of th nuclear or atomic phy i . Throuah than 200 college and universitie proj ct, it is anticipated that th e the mployment of advan ed in tru­ agreed that athlete-recruitment wa work will be continued in ucce ding ment perfected during th war, om , becoming a erious matter. The mem­ years through further financial a ist­ the inv ntions of Dr. i r they x­ ber present, representing 20 co ll eg~ ance from the avy. pect to J ur ue their tudi into hith- conference, r commended sharp re- Directing the atomic re earch proj- rto une plor d field. EPTEMBER, 1946 5

la\\", etc .. to take preliminaf) \ ork at New Registration Plan Adopted one of the teachers college or j un ior college neare t their h m. II fre hmen. men or I omen. veteran Do you knot that under plans now in effect it is possible for you to be or non· eteran . provided they are registered at the University of Minnesota even though you are actually attend­ Iiune ota re idenL, may enroll at ing one of the other Minnesota colleges-a teachers college, an approved an - one of the participatinO' in titu· publicly-supported junior college, or a liberal arts college? Thus if you find tion throuO'h the joint regi tration it impossible or inconvenient actually to go to the niversilY you can progress plan. Registration of ophomore­ normally toward your educational objective during the initial year or It 0 at under the plan i limited t Minne ota some olher instillltion without loss of time or credit. re ident not enrolled during 1945-46 in the colleO'e where they now apply for joint admi sion. The tudent who HE above me aO'e to the ) oung inO' maximum utilization of th facili­ enrolls under the plan I ill pay the T men and women of Minne, ota tie- for higher education in the tate. regular fee of the in titution where planning to nt r colleO'e thi fall \\ a Preliminary e timate- indicated he take hi \I ork and not the fee mad po ibl b) the adoption b) the required at the 'niver it. In ad· ni\er it) and the college of the that th demand for college work b a minimum of 41,000 tudent would dition, he will pay a pecial matricu­ tate of a joint regi tration plan. The lation fee of five dollar to help de­ spe ial r gi tration arrano-ement wi ll omewhat exceed available facilitie e en though the ni er it provid fray the co,t of the added ervices enabl tudent to make certain that involved in j oint registration. their program in the fre hman and for an in rea sed enrollment of 40 per cent b -ond it large t pre I ar 'ear, Entrance upon the plan of joint ophomore year in one in titution regi tration will not require a _tudent will conform to urricular require­ taking care of an enrollment of 22.- 000. and the four- ear liberal arts to make a trip to the niversity cam· m nt of another college to which pu-. He will 0'0 to the teacher col­ th )' expect to tran fer later. c?l!ege of the tate make imilar pr - n IOn • lege or junior collaO'e of hi choice In titution parti ipating thu far I~here he will complete th forms re­ in th plan of j int regi tration with 'juired by the college and the n:i er· Utilize Facilities the niv r it of Minne ota in lude All it -. In ac ordance with hi educa· th tate tea h r college at Dulu th. The tional obje tive . the tudent \ ill ap­ Bemidji, Moorhead, t. Cloud, Man­ ply for admi ion in the colleO'e of ka to and Winona; and all the ap­ the ni er it ' in which i offered th proved public juni r college in Min­ work he propo e to und rtake. n tao Coop ration wi th the liberal Hi application for admi ion will art college of the tate ~ ill be de- then be forwarded to the niver ity loped to the extent that the indi­ authoritie and upon appro al b idual college de ire to parti ipate. the niver ity's major ad i er in that T he plan will not affect the long­ field, he wi ll be i ued an admi ion tandinO' right of qualifi ed tudent to certificate. pon receipt of thi cer· tran fer to the niversit from th tificate he will be. in fact, a tudent fo ur- ear liberal art college of the of the ni er ity even throuO'h he is tate_ taking hi work actually in another Th plan ha been approved by a institution. committee of th A ociati on of Min­ ne ota Coli ges, the Co uncil of Minn - ota College the Junior CoUeO'e ler. a ociate pro· so iation, the tate Department of Edu ation the tate Teachers Coil g B ard, and the R gent of the Univer- ity of Minne ota. The plan, und [' th term of the agr ement b tl en the Minn sota in titutio ns of higher edu ation, ha b n tablish d initi­ all y for a period of two ear . P r ior to the fall of 194 th entire plan \ i ll be subje t to re iew and recon id ra­ tion.

ogy. 6 MINNESOTA ALUMNUS Football

A MBER of turdy athlete who will be wearing a Minnesota uniform in intercollegiate competition for the fir t time will have the chance to show their abilities when the Go­ pher open the ea on again t e­ bra ka in Memorial tadium on Sep­ tember 28. There may be everal new name- in the starting line-up even though there are 24 lettermen on the squad which started praclice on Northrop Field early in eptember. From the team of the 1945 season are 12 lettermen-Ken Parent, Dale Minnesota football coaches. standing. left to right. . ends; Dr. George Pulver, Larry 01 ono ki , Earl Bruhn, Hauser. line; . head coach; Ward. backfield. In front row. left to right. lohn Roning. B squad coach; George Svendsen. centers. and Wally lohnson. Warren Be on, Tom Cate , Bob Car­ assistant B squad coach. ley, Laron Honn, Mike Kis ell, Mer­ land Ki pert, Dick Lutz and Bill Mar­ cotte. There ha been a good supply of eran in the po Ilion, Larry Olson­ candidates for line positions. On o ki and Chuck Dellago, and Leo Mo­ The pre-war lettermen who have re­ the first day of practice, Bierman e­ mellini and Mike Ki sell. The center turned to the campus to complete lected two lettermen, Herb Hein and delegation recei ing top attention their college career , both in the Vern Gagne, at the end position on ha included Don 01 on, Warren Be- classroom and on the gridiron, are his fir t eleven. Among the others on, teve ilianofI, Bob Lo sie, Clayt Bill Baumgartner, Herman Frickey, who have moved in and out at the Tonnemaker, Walt Edwards and Bob Herb Hein, Chuck Dellago, Bob Hary end on the first and second eleven Kelon. and Bob Sandberg. Another group of are Bill Baumgartner, pre-war Go­ It i po ible that the starting back­ lettermen which includes men who pher, Bill Marcotte, Bud Grant, Lar­ played on a wartime Minnesota team field thi year will include no hold­ ry Hallenkamp, Bob Carley, Marvin over from the 1945 ea on , although before entering service includes Hein and Fred Baston. Chuck Avery, Walt Edwards, Vern there are veteran available from ear­ Getting the call at the first team lier Gopher team. The edge in the Gagne, Bob Lossie, Dick Leversee tackle positions at the beginning of and Dick Luckemeyer. competition for the quarterback po t the practice es ion were Milan Gre­ ha been held by Bob and berg of For the fir t time ince the 1941 fich of Mountain Iron and Bill Car· Rice Lake Wi., a member of the season the the Gopher coaching staff roll of La Crescent, Wi. Other giv­ 1942 team; Merland Kispert who is at full strength this fall with Ber­ ing competition for service at tackle played both the quarterback and half­ nie Bierman heading a taff which in­ are Ed Bu h, Dean Wid eth, who i a back po itions in 1944 and 1945 and clude Dr. George Hau er, Bert Bas­ nephew of all-American Ed Wit eth, Bill Thiele of Minneapolis, a fre h­ ton, George vendsen, Dal Ward, Merle Moehnke, Dick Peol, and Gene man. John Roning and Wally Johnson. Fritz. The left halfback position i the By the time of the opening kickoff In the econd game of the season key pot in the atlack and the coaches it i possible that other men will have in Memorial tadium on October 5, have not found anyone to ati fy their moved up from the re erve to get requirement for this important a - the Gopher will play Indiana, de­ the call for action in the variou po i­ fending conference champions. The ignm nt. Herman Fri key, letter­ tions in the line. Early in the train­ man in 1941 and 1942, who played remaining home game will be as fol­ ing period the entire quad was divid­ low: Wyoming, Oct. 19; Michigan, for orth\ e tern while in er i e, ed in A and B divi ion. As the ha been handicapped b injuries. Nov. 2; Purdue, ov. 9, and Iowa, training progre ed orne men moved ov. 16. The game a\ ay will be Other leading candidate for th posi­ ahead to the A group while olher tion are Warren William of Minne­ at orthwe tern Oct. 12' Ohio late, moved down, temporarily. at lea t, to Oct. 26, and Wi con in, ov. 23. apoli ,ho aw some ervice on the the B group. nd several men have Iowa Preflight team; Bill Bye of The Minne ota quad this year i tried their football talents in differ­ Anoka ,ho ,a a member of the trong on number, ize and inexperi­ ent po ition in the line-up. Verne Great Lake quad in 194..5 ; Tom ence. In the group are veral fresh­ Gagne was moved from end to full­ Cate of t. Paul, letterman; Everett men with out tanding high chool back when it appeared that hi fine Faunce of Fergus Fall who played record who may eventually become all-around ability might be u ed to for Iowa tat la t year while sta­ top ranking performers a they pick the be t advantage of the team in the tion d there in the navy program, up the fine point of the intercolle­ backfield post. Mickey Mc eill of Hampton, Iowa, giate game from Bernie Bierman and Among the guard in fir land ec­ and Walter Hau ken, a freshman his a~ i tant . ond team line-up have be n two v t- from Clem 0 d. Williams i a broth- SEPTEMBER, 1946 7

er of "Red" Wi ll iam who tarred for training ha been Ken Beier dorf, lege at Minneapoli , ov. 2, a morn­ Minne ota at left half durin u the war 200-pound fre hman from Chicaao. ing game; t. Olaf College at Torth­ year. He has had no football experience field, ov. 8; Wi con in B quad at Chu k very of ntigo, Wi ., who above the high chool level. In juries Madi on, ov. 23. won hi Minnesota letter in 1943 and have handicapped Dick Lutz of Min­ The Homecoming game opponent wa a regular on the Great Lake neapoli , who wa a re erve in 1945, for the Gopher "\ ill be Purdue on team la t eason, may be the tarter and Bob Bach of Coon alley, Wi ., o . 9. ariou alumni events in- at right halfback. Other candidate a fir t year man. Jim Malo ky of cluding the annual Homecoming are Emerson (Buzz) Wheeler of Min­ Cro by-Ironton an all-state high alumni dinner in Coffman nion will neapoli , recently of the navy, who chool election in both football and be cheduled on the campu a high­ played hi football at Gu tavus dol­ ba ketbaJl, may be a aluable man in light of the aeneral Home oming phu la t fall and then tran ferred the pot once he gain experience. prO!ITam. to orthwe tern where he won let­ A ha been mentioned_ ern Gagne Thi year the expert who ize up ters in ba ketball and ba eball' Bob of Robbin dale, a letterman at end, the conference team have placed the Colli on of Fairmont, who won hi ha been gi en a trial at th e fullback Gopher well down the Ii t. Favored letter in 1943, and Dick Luckemeyer po ition. Bob andberg can al 0 be a the powerhou e of the confer­ of t. Cloud, who \ as a member of used in the po ition. ence and top candidate for cham­ the 1942 team. The B quad coached by ] ohn Ron­ pion hip honor are Illinoi, Ohio The quad is lacking in experi­ ing will play a chedule of aame thi tate. Michigan. Indiana and Pur­ enced performers in the fullback po i­ fall. lready scheduled are games due. It will be noted that all of tioll. umber one on the fullback with irginia Junior College at ir­ the e team , except Illinoi . are on Ii t during a good part of the early ginia on Oct. 19; Hibbina ] unior Col- the Minne ota _chedule. Minnesota"'s 1946 Football Squad

Home Town Yr. WI. Ht_ Po _ Yr_ WI. HI. Po __ - A very, Cbarle ntigo. Wi. Jr 179 6 RH Kafka_ Gerald p 220 6-1 G Bach. Bob oon Valley. Wi-. Fr 200 6 FB KeLon. Robert Fr 175 6 Bailey, DOll Ii nneapolis Fr 190 6 FB King, John Fr 180 6-1 lIB Barnes, Rohert 'i an Franci"co Fr 212 5-11 T • ](jsperL !\Ierland r 205 6-1 QB Baston, Fred linneapolL p 190 5-11 E *Ki selL l\Iike 193 5-11 G

- Baumgartner, Bill " Duluth r 198 6-4 E Kuzma. Frank 186 6 FB Bede, em, Lam'e n e Web ter, . D. Fr 225 6-2 T Laron, William J. 175 5-10 G *B 011, WalTen Iinneapoli p 200 6 C · Los, ie. Rob rt r 185 5-9 Beiertidorf. Ken .. Ch icago Fr 197 6 FB Luckemeyer. Di k 180 6 Lll Brown, Bob Bemidji Fr 208 6-2 FB Lundeen, Ralph r 170 5-10 E Broughton, pen er linneapoli- Fr 198 6-1 _ QB -Lutz, Richard 187 5-9 FB · Bruhn, Earl l\Iound r 190 5-11 QB :\lalo ky, Jim 190 5-11 FB Bu h. Edward Thermopoli , yo_ p 222 6-1 T - :\1arcolle. Bill 180 6 E Bye, William Anoka Fr 178 5-9 LH :\1 Alii tel'. Ralph D. 188 6-P~ FB arley, Bob l. Paul r 175 5-11 E :\[c eal' . larenc - arroll, il liam Le r cent Fr 230 6-5'~ T [cKa~. Don 220 6-4- T ate, Thoma t. P aul r 170 5-11 LII :\lcGo\ ern. Jame -* oll ison, Bob Fairmont Fr 190 -11 RH M eil, J ohn 195 6-1 T Danielson, Bob Iinneapolis Jr 200 5-11 G :\lcInnis. J im 207 6-2 E De oster, Dougla t. Paul Jr 215 6-1 i G :\1 amara. Jame 200 5-9 *Dellago. barl s Virginia Jr 225 5-11 G :7Il ealey, R bert 215 6' E Di tz, Robert , 'i ahpeton, . D. p 220 5-9 ~ T \loehnke. Merle :.10 6-2-- T · Edwards, -.;; alter linneapoli p 205 6-1 QB 1 omellini, Leo 238 6-2 Elliott, !Iarr Watertown p 168 -9 LH 'o\ otny, Robert inona r 205 6-2 T Engebrit on, Leroy Web tel', . D. Fr 210 6- 1 FB lon, Don A_ Virginia Fr 197 6-1._ Falin e. E er lte, Fergus Fall p 170 5-11 LH Olson Gareth indom Jr 195 5-11 FB *Fri key, Herman Billinn's, l\1ont. 200 5-11 JIB · 01 onoski. Larr - .. Lan a ter Jr 205 6-2 G Fritz, Eugene Luverne 210 6-2 T · Parent. K enneth Foley p 170 6 LH • 8"ne. La \ ern R bbin dale 205 6 E P eot, Ri hard LaGrange. Ill. Fr 260 6-3 T Giddiqg , Dean l\li.nnea poli 245 6-3 T Pullen len 1iruleapoli Fr 168 --91~ HB Gordien, Fortuoe Minneapoli 208 6-1 E · Puh er. Dale Minn apoli ~ p In 5-9 ranl, Harry uperior. \" i . 190 6-2L..J E Roetman, Ro Minneapolis Fr 220 6-3 T Grev ich, Milan l\lountain Iron 195 6-g~ T and berg. Dixon Ric Lak i. Fr 20 6-:" T Hal nkamp, eorg . l\Iinneapoli 205 6 E - ' an db rg Robert Ric Lake, i Jr 210 6-3 QB · Hary, Bob t. loud HB ilianofI, ~ teve \ il merding, Pa. Jr 190 6-1 Hau ken, alter lenwood 170 5-9 liB olon, Han e)' Duluth 196 6-1 FB H lTelfinger, Frank l\linncapoli 187 6-1' ~ E ollau onIon Duluth Fr 187 6-:.. E [arl He lT eHinger, 1inneapoli 199 6-3 E Thiel , tanle l inneapoli Fr 190 6- 1 " QB *Hein , H rb Billing , Iont. r 165 6 E Tonnemak r, Frank linn ap Ii Fr 220 6-2 Hein, 1arvin ... Billings, lont_ p 178 6 E \Vagner. Dani I lorri Fr 190 -10 II ndd kso n, Harry Robbinsdal Fr 'Wh eel r, 203 5-10 Em r. on Iinneapoli. ~ p 180 6 RII I-To lker, Don IinneBpoli p 202 6 - 2~!l G Widseth, Dean Gonvi k p 215 6-_ T Holum, David rand Rapid Fr 175 5-11 B Zillgill, Don Red ing Fr 185 -10 FB - H nn, Larol] Iinneapolis p 182 5-10 Zimm rman, Darrell Tra y Fr 185 6-P::l RH H urd, ii, Jr. 1inneapoli p 200 6-2% Zup l1, J ltn [ untain Iron Fr 188 5-11 LH Just, Fr deri k, Jr. [ankato .Ir 180 6-2 E · Lett rm n 8 MINNE OTA ALUl\IN S

Campus View from the Office of the Minnesota Alumnus in Coffman Union Some People You May Know

E day in mid-August while the at orfolk avy Yard. At time of b Franci (Gu ) Coop r '41 for­ O editor wa making plan and eparation he held the rank of lieu­ m r Minne ota Daily Editor, who writing copy for thi i ue of the tenant commander. His wife (Mary joined th e public relation staff of Minnesota Alumn us in hi office in O. Peter on '29Ed ) wa with him at the ew York Life In urance Com­ Coffman nion, he kept notes on hi Torfolk and taught art at the U. . O. office visitor and other activitie of and to cout groups. He is no~ as­ pany followin a his wartim service the day_ si tant director of per onn I in charge with the U. . Marines. of training in th e municipally-owned First came the po tman. The mail D partment of Wat r and Power. He Jean Marian Pet r on '45, was the i comparatively light in Augu t but \ rites that he would like to hear subj ct of an information relea e there were everal intere ting and from classmates. His addre : 364 from the nited Air Line. he i a welcome note from alumni. A let­ orth A enue 53, Los Angele 42. tewarde_ and has been a igned to ter from E. 1. Van Hou en '42, includ­ nited' we tern divi ion. A mem- ed the informaL ion that h wa di­ Mary Wright Andrew '34, at one 1 r r of Ipha D Ita Pi, the YWCA charged from the navy in June and time a member of the taff of the and the pa!1ish club while on the immediatel enrolled in the Har ard Minne oLa Alumnus, was marri d on 1 ; ~llnpu, he i th e daughter of Mr. Bu ine school for th econd year July 16 to Charles T. Ayers of ew and Mr . Ed win T. P terson of t. of the cour e leading to a Master's YOl·k. he left th campu to join Paul. degree in bu ine admini tration. the taIl of Ruthrauff & Ryan, Inc., Other Minnesotan he has een at ew York advertising agenc. ell' . 150 in tbe morning mail- a notc Harvard are L n Robert 42B, en­ of this marriage in a note from ig­ fr m th e Am ri an Red Cro I ublic­ rolled in the Bu ine chool, Al urd Hagen '15, of the w Y rk Life ity office and date-lin d Munich, Ger­ Moorman '43, and L n Ke es 43, Insurance Company and active \ ork­ many, with the ne~ that Jan t E. nder on '4.5, II ill be pictur d in th both in the Harvard Law chool. Van e!" in th Minne ota Alumni Club of Hou en's addre i: C-21 Gallatin ew York. forth oming "Arm - a y Pi Lorial Hall, Harvard Bu in s School, Bo-­ lVlagazin ," a movie 11 IV reel feature hown to the armed force through . ton 63, Ma . • out the world. h i a meml er of From A rth ur J. Imm '30, there Al oin the mail a cop of Volume th e talI of th H ofbrau Club in Mll­ \ a a note that he ha returned to 1, unlber 1, of an atlracti ve lillIe ni h and ~Ii ll be on of th club work· Lo Angele afl r nearly three ear magazine, the e\ York Life e s. r . to app ar in th movi. BefoT of navy duty in th p ronnel office ~ . usp ·t that it wa dire ted thi way joinin O' the Reel ro " in 194.5, Mi ' SEPTEMBER 1946 9

nd r on wa an inve tigator for th tuted and directed by William L . tate univer ity. He \\"a thoroughly ational City Bank f II' York. unn, director of niver ity rela- impre ed. particularly b the com­ nd what' thi? nann unce- tion . It i a mo t aluable and u e­ prehen ive program of off.campu m nt from the office of Carl R. Gray. ful occa ion for all I ho attend- indio .ervice rendered by the niver it to Jr., vice pre id nt of the Chicago a";d vidual in campu po ition who are the citizen of the tate. In order rth W tern Railway y tem, to dir ctly involved in one way or an­ to cover the entire in tructional, re­ the efIe t that Jame B. Lund 42L. oth r I ith niver it) informational _earch and er ice program of the has been appointed a public relations and publicity aciti ities. mong ni er it he concluded that he repre ntati e of that railroad with tho_e pre ent at the _e sian are Wil· would have to expand hi propo ed headquarter in t. Paul. liam Harri '32. manager of the ni· I\Titing project from one article to a ver it lew ervice: hi a i tanto _erie of . ix. om pIe ted the mail• jut in time to Janet ali bUT) '31; Thoma H. tell" gre t Emil Behren , former member ard, editor of ni er it)' publica­ The cIa of 1942• cored heavily in of Coffman nion board of go er­ tion ; Chet Roan and Oti D pwick office new that da. An earl after­ nor , r cently returned to ci ilian life '33. of the athletic department pub­ noon caller wa John C. Beattie 42, after everal year of army ervice in­ licit bureau' the editor of the Min­ a leader in the ROTC and other cam­ cludina 22 month 0 er ea. With an ne ota lumnu , and repre entative pu acti itie in the year jut be­ engine ring unit he participat d in of radio tation K OM, the ni er­ fore the war. Back from el'eral the landing on Le te_ at the Lingu - . it Pre• . the vi ual education de­ 'ear. of arm er ice h i now in the en Gulf, and on Okinawa. Befor re­ partment, the publicity di i ion of Minneapoli office of the etna In- turning to the . thi ummer, he the niver it Department of gri­ uran e Compan. While in Bo ton II a tationed in Korea. He will be culture, and the Photographic Labo­ early thi ummer. Jack and hi wife ba k in school to compl te the \ ork ratorv at ni er it Farm. (Jean Ru 42 g) had a plea ant re­ for hi degree thi fall. In tOWll Returned to'th office and condu t­ union with everal m rnber of their to tT) to find a room for the hool ed Harlan C. Brown '30, and Mr . cia -Cal mith and Mr. rnith 'ear, he had a date later in the da Brown of Raleigh. orth Carolina, on (Lucille Bailiff), ,h have ince re­ to m et Ed. Braman '43. a tour of the Coffman nion build­ turned to Minneapolis, Kenny Blo k. Bill aldl ell '43, former editor of ina. He wa r cently released from who wa taking ad an ed work in the Minne ota Dail . popped into the the arm ' and before returning to hi bu ine engineering at M.LT.. and offi e ju t a f \ minute after Emil po ition a librarian at orth Caro· Bob Meyer and Mr . Meyer- l Genie had left. Bill" a relea ed from the lina tate Coil ge he came to Minne- Ma chnederharn.) ota with Mr . BrOlin for a vacation He \\'a intere ted in aettincr under and to vi it relati e . way at an arl date the promotion for tlle fifth anniversary reunion of Togeth r ,,-ith• Profe or her the las of 1942 on lurnni Da . next Christen en '24, of the political June. It will b a plea ant oc a_ion department and Bill Harri for the cIa • I hich \1 a nearing grad- er ice. had lun h on uation when war arne. in th ampu Club in the nion building with a member of the for­ Later came a telephone• call from eign inf rmation ction of the Ruth Lampland Ro. '28. who wa a ~ tat D partment. The vi itor was leaving that evenin with her youna on the campu t se ure material for son by air ~or their hom in' on­ an arti Ie on a typi al midll'e tern ne ti ut foIl winO' a vi it \I iUl mem­ bers of her famil)~ in t. Paul. Her hu.band. Duncan R ~ 5. \I a. in the arm) and 0 Ih ' pent s m of th II ar 'ear at amp_ throucyh­ 0111 • out th ountr '. On her arril'al at When Bill I arned that his fri nd, LaGuardia Field ~ h exp ted to ee Emil B hren •• had jut be n in. h her broUler. D n Lampland '3- et ff a 1'0 s the call1pu in ear h (f er E. who ha his h adquarters at him. H lias barely ut of th build­ tll field and i in chara of ngi­ ing when int the IIi e cam anoth r n rinl-!; op rati n for th ~e\l' York j urnali III graduate. orge ate di isi n of Pan meri an irll'a) s. '42. nOli a report r n th finn ap - Then a long di. tance all from Dr. Ii Tribun. orge wanted to s t' H. J. Lon '32 Id. in Mankato. He Bill and . 0 he departed on th trail i pr jdent of the Iankato Li n, f aldll n "ho ha I departed n th lub thi ar and that organization trail of B hren . plan . pon or a dinner and pr - "Tam in 01 ember or December for -t n th • th hicyh s hool fo tball pIa er f that city. H wanted a.si tan in e­ cUI'in a a _p ak r and also the mOl'i gr un· JE highliehL of th 1 -1-6 linn - ta ci! .e - n. 10 MINNESOTA L MN S

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-1879- -1897- of teaching in Minnesota. He retired The oldest Minnesota Alumnus, Dr. Frank H. Alexander '97Md, April 12 after 12 yea rs as principal of William L. Bassett '79A, died last July died August 3 in St. Paul. He served Folwell junior high school. Since he in Los Angeles. He was a member of as physician and su rgeon for the Great left Folwell he has moved to his sum­ a pioneer Minneapolis family and son Northern Railway until 1911 when he mer home near Glenwood, Minnesota. of the man for whom Bassett's Creek moved to St. Paul to enter private prac­ During his tenure as a Minneapolis in Minneapoli was named. tice. He is survived by a daughter, educator, he was active in the establish­ frs. R. G. Keyworth (Marion C. Alex­ ment of the junior high system. -1881- ander '15 ) of St. Paul. Mrs. Leonora Stuart Snyder, wife of -1904- Fred B. Snyder '81A, chairman of the -1898- Ernest Laycock '04L died la t spring Board of Regents died last June at her Frank McKellip '98EE, Faribault after a short illness. He practiced law home in Minneapolis. city engineer and member of the state in New Bedford, Mass. registration board for architects, eng:­ -1884- John Wicks '04EE, retired last spring neers and surveyors, was guest of after nearly forty-one years of service Mrs. Bessie Scovell (Bessie Lay the honor at a dinner given recently by the '84A) is the oldest member of the First with the Automatic Electric ompany Minneapolis and t. Paul district So­ and affiliated organizations as a de­ Methodist Church of Minneapolis cieties of Professional Engineers. where she has been a member since velopment engineer. He specialized in 1880. This summer she gave a Sunday -1899- the development of automatic toll tele­ sermon in the absence of the pastor. Lucy R. Cha e '99 , prominent in phone systems and developed new cir­ For several years following her gradu­ political affairs of Washington state, cuit and mechanical arrangements ation she taught school in Duluth and died June 11 at her home in Seattle. which resulted in the issuance of near­ since has been a lecturer to university Miss Chase taught at North high school ly 100 patents in his name. As a re­ and civic audiences throughout the in Minneapolis prior to going to Seattle sult of this work, he was one of the country. in 1904. he is survived by a brother, outstanding inventors of the United Charles. tates honored as a "Modern Pioneer" -1888- -1900- by the National ssociation of Manu­ Services were conducted May 4 in William G. Wheeler 'OOEx, died last facturers. Mr. Wicks lives in Biloxi, Amboy, Minn., for Charles Thomp­ fississippi. son '88A; '92L, who died last April in July at his home in Minneapolis. He was a resident of Minneapolis for 60 Chicago. Mr. Thompson was born in -1905- years and for the last 45 years was as­ Portland, Maine, in 1857 and came Harry H. Angst '05M, and Mrs. sociated wi th Munsingwear, Inc. to Minneapolis at the age of 21. After ngst (Dora Holcomb '09A) have graduation from the university, he -1901- moved to the West Coa t following his practiced law in Minneapolis. In 1898 Severin Iverson 'OIL, died June 23 retirement last summer. Their address he moved to mboy where he practiced in Spokane, Washington, where he at present is 250 E. 31st Street, Nation­ until 1942. had practiced law until his retirement al ity, alifornia. They formerly JJ1 1945. lived in Aio, Arizona, where he was a -1893- Rev. Ernest F. McGregor 'OIA, re­ mine superintendent. Charles S. Deaver '93L; '94LL; tired clergyman, died fay 31 at his Alfred L. Schafer '05Ex, has been '95LLM, was fatally injured and his home in linton, onn. Rev. Mc­ appointed director f the convention wife critically injured in an automo­ Gregor al 0 held B.D., M.A., and Ph.D. office of the American Red Cross. Until bile collision near St. Paul last month. degrees from Yale. t the time of his recently he was manager of the Pacific He is survived by Mrs. Deaver and two retirement in 1943 he had completed Area Headquarters. The Convention daughters, Mrs. Edward K. Brown 31 years as a congregational minister. Office is a newly-established office (Margaret Deaver '32Ex), and Mrs. Mrs. McGregor ( ertrude Jewett '04A) which will centralize and coordinate Chester E. Betcher (Dorothy Deaver and four children urvive. planning for annual Red Cross na­ '31Ex). -1902- tional conventions. Before entering Red -1895- Hugo Lundborg '02L, died at his ross work in 1919 Mr. Schafer was Olaf O. Stageberg '95A, former Red home in len Lake last June. He engaged in ed u ation work in North Wing seminary faculty member and practiced law in Minneapolis for thirty­ Dakota for fifteen years. one-time candidate for governor of five years until his retirement in 1941. Minnesota, died recently in Red Wing. -1907- Surviving are his wife and son. Profe sor tageberg taught at Jewell Arnold Gloor '07 , instructor of Lutheran College, Jewell, Iowa, for ten -1903- erman at St. Paul A ademy, St. Paul, years and then taught Greek and Ger­ Last June Newton H. Hegel '03A; has been named professor of German man at the Red Wing seminary until '33MA, was honored at a reception in and registrar at Parsons College, Fair­ it closed in 1932. He is survived by Minneapolis by former students and field Iowa. He has taught at the Mrs. tageberg and five sons. colleagues upon completion of 43 years a ademy for five years and prior to this SEPTEMBER, 1946 11 was superintendent of schools in New Germany with headquarters in Frank­ -1913- Ulm and rookston. furt. Dr. Lars A. Garness '13Ex, retired Brig. Gen. Erle D. Luce '07L, for­ Mrs. Norman Christie (Ethel E. Chicago physician, died last summer mer commander of the 135th infantry Chase 'llHEc) is teaching in Kenne­ at his home in Chicago. He formerly ;egiment of the Minnesota National wick, Washington where many of the was chief pathologist in St. Elizabeth Guard, died last July in Minneapolis workers on the Hanford atomic bomb Hospital Chicago, and president of of a heart attack. He was president of project live. She formerly taught in the medical staif of the orwegian­ the Hampshire Arms Hotel and for Eugene, Oregon, and later became en­ American Hospital. He is survived by fifteen years was president and general gaged in recreation work at the bomb Mrs. Garness. manager of the Minnesota Western project. D.r. Joseph M. Hall '13Md, a prac­ Railroad Co., and the Electric Short­ -1912- ticing physician in Minneapolis for 32 line Terminal Co. In 1942 he was William S. Mather '12Ex died in years, died July 19 at his home. Six called back to active duty as deput.v Lewiston, Montana, last May. months prior to his death he had given director of the Omaha, ebraska office On January 25 1946, Rev. Russell H. up his practice because of ill health. of civilian defense and later was named Stafford '12A, was formally inaugur­ He was a member of the American chairman of draft appeal board No.2 ated as president of the Hartford Medical Association Minnesota State in Minneapolis. He is survived by Mrs. Seminary Foundation, Hartford, Con­ Medical Association and the Hennepin Luce (Hazel Brown '07Ex) and a son, necticut. More than 150 institutions of Coun ty Medical Society. William. higher learning and a large number of -1914-- Herbert T. Park 07L, Minneapolis religious bodies were officially repre­ Russell D. McCord 'l4Ex former attorney and past president of the sented. Rev. Stafford was pastor of the Minneapolis advertising and newspaper Hennepin County Bar Association, Old South Church in Boston from 1927 man, died recently in San Francisco died July 25 at his home in Minneapo­ to 1945. where he had made his home since lis. He was a member of the Minnesot"l. Per c i val W. Viesselman '12A' 1944. In 1914. he became a member of State Bar A~socjation, the American '13MA; '15L, former Minneapolis law­ the Minneapolis Journal staff and later Bar A sociation, a national trustee of yer and University of Minnesota facul­ worked with Duluth newspapers. Dur­ the on of the merican Revolution ty member, died August 11 in Law­ ing World "Var I he sen'ed as a major and a member and officer of several rence, Kansas. He was a m=ber of in the military police in Paris. After other fraternal and professional groups. the political science faculty at the Uni­ the war he returned to the Journal He is survived by his wife and a son, versity of Minnesota from 1915 to 192 staff and in 19~ became engaged in Willis '37GC. when he became professor of law at the field of advertising. In 1931 he -1909- North Dakota University. In 1933 he organized the {cCord Co. advertising 11 of the district judges in the sixth returned to Minneapolis to resume law agency of which he was head until judicial district of the state of North practice. From 1935 until his retire­ 19·H when he sold his interest. He Dakota are graduates of the University ment in 1943 because of illness, he was joined Batten, Barton, Durstine and of Iinnesola Law School. Leo C. professor of law at the Uill ersity of Osborne Inc., on the west coast in 1944 Broderick '09L, at Mandan Harvey J. Kansas. He is survived by irs. Vies­ and at the time of his death was in San Miller '10L at Dickinson and Joris O. selman (Roxie Utley '17Ex) and four Francisco preparing to open an office Wigen '10L, at Hettinger. children. in Shanghai. China. Funeral services were conducted August 6 in Barnesville, Minnesota, for Dr. George R. Metcalf '09D. He was a former president of the Northwestern 50-Yard Line Seats Scarce This Year District Dental Society and a member of the board of trustees of the Minne­ H OW to sati fy orne 60.000 reque ts for eats bet\l'een the goal sota State Dental ssociation. He al 0 line in Memorial tadium when ther are only about 21.000 had been president of the Barnesville such -eat is one of the problem in high r mathematic and foot­ school board and commercial club, a ball fan p ychology no' being ponder d by MarJl Ryman. athletic member of the city council and secre­ ticket manager in Cooke Hall. tary-treasurer of the tate board of den­ tal examiners. Whether you ubmit the problem to alg bra. O'eometry, trigo­ nometry or a Ouija bard, th answer ahm' comes out ju t the Dr. Ralph L. West '09Ag of t. am: omebody has to it b hind the goal lin and e en b hind Paul, was elected second vice president th O'oal po_t. The av ra"e ticket applicant will grant this-but h of the American Veterinary Medical till can't see wh he hould.n't b on of the 21, 00. Association at a convention held this summer in Boston. H e is secretary of Who get the eats? Fir t probabl 10.000 tudent 1\'U bu. the Minnesota tate Live tock Sanitary sea - n book thi eaT and. the number ma be areater. Th ISltmg Board. chool has a priority on veral thou-and b onferenc agr ement. Th fa ulty and tafI will normally u-e up about 2.000 plus another -1910- thou and or 0 for MilID ota 1 tter·winner of lh pa t, d. th n, John F. Wingate 'lOEx, formerly of of course, th r are the public season book hold rs who thi- year Minneapolis died last June in Sterling, may total 17,000. nd th re are those who ordered inO'le game Illinois. ticket arly. Jow 1 t's ee--that lotal- ... Oh oh! You take it from -1911- here Mr. R 'man. Arthur C. Burkhard '11 ; '12M , is with the military government of 12 MINNESOT A L l\INU

-1915- died of a heart attack at his home in direc tors of th e Brand Name Re­ Ruth M. Colberg ' 15 , died June 2. Grand Rapids, Minnesota on June 27. search Foundation. He is presi dent of She is survived by a brother and sister. H e se rved in the medical corps during the National Association of Broad­ Dr. Arnold L. Hamel '15Md, Min­ World War I and later se t up a prac­ casters and wi ll represent the radio in­ neapolis physician for 32 years, died of tice in Red Wing. H e moved to Bovey dustry. The fo undation is a voluntary a heart attack July 31 at Brainerd, Min­ in 1918 and to Grand Rapids in 1924. membership organization fo rmed in nesota, while enroute with his family H e is survived by his wife and six 1943 fo r the purpose of publicizing to Whitefish Lake. Dr. Hamel was on children. fea tures of th e brand name system of the staff of St. Mary 's Hospital and had -1918- competi ti ve distribution. Mr. Miller offices in the Donaldson Building. Sur­ Lawrence T. Bige~ow '18Ex, account resigned from the circuit vivors include Mrs. H amel (Lucy executive fo r the Minneapolis fi rm of court of appeals in 1945. Gibbs '18A); five daughters; five sons; Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and -1920- a sister, Mrs. C. E. McLaughlin (Fid­ Beans died in July after a brief illness. Abbott K. Bailey '20M, is engaged elia M. Hamel '28Ex), of Sioux Falls, H e attended Lehi gh University and in in mining and electrical engi nee ring South Dakota, and a brother, Dr. Ig­ World War I served in the Navy. H e in La Paz, Bolivia. H e went to hile natius H amel '25Ex of Erie, Pa. i survived by his wife, five daughters in 1920 with the Guggenheim mining -1916- and one son. interes ts. After three years in Chile he Ralph Colby '16A; '19MA, who is Dr. Henry E. Hartig '18E; '24Ph.D .. went to Bolivia and since then has en­ professor of English at Oregon State new director of electrical engineering, gaged in mining acti vities there. H IS College, ca lled at the Alumni Office is continuing his study of so und waves oldest daughter, Marie T eresa, recently las t August. with the aid of a $2,500 grant by the was married to Rene Victoro alderon. Dr. Solomon D. David '16Md, is Research Corporation of ew York His mother, Mrs. Joseph Bailey, lives celebrating the return of hi s so n, S. D. through the Frederick Cottrell mem­ in Minneapolis. Dav id J r., who served 15 months in ori al fund. Royce Chalmers '20Ex, of Miami, the European theater of war as a pilot Judge Justin Miller '18Ex, secretary Florida, was killed when the plane he on a B-17. Dr. David also co ntributed of the Minnesota ~ tat e crime com· was flying from Cleveland to Miami to the war effort by rais in g beef, hogs 111ISSIOn from 1923 to 19:6, has oeen crashed into a mountain nea r Eliza­ and poultry on his 2,000 ac re ranch at named a member of the board of beth, Tenn. He was fou nd er of the H empstead, T exas, where he makes his week-end retreats. Dr. David, an or­ thopaedic surgeon, practices in Hous­ ton, . Librdry Collection Is PrdisecJ John D. Robb '16-17L, has been named dean of the college of fine art mo t complete collection of wedi h book in the niLed lale at the University of New Mexico. He THE i to be found in the niver it of Minne ota librar , a cording is professor of music and head of the to Olof von Feilitzen of th Swedi h Royal librar in lockh 1m. department of music at the Universit} of New Mexico and has been acting Von Feilitzen, who pent tw o w ek. this umm r che king th dean of the fi ne arts co llege fo r two niver ity library' wedish holding , aiel the ollecLion of wed ish years. H e was grad uated from Har­ fi ction and literary hi tory i xcellent and ver liLlI j n eded to make va rd Law School and began practicing it pra ti all perfect. Th niv r it library also ha mor than 40000 law in New York in 1922 but gave it j ue of cyovernmen t documents of th candinavian ountrie, mainl} up to teach anJ compo e music. In wedi h, and in thi at gory it i ex ell doni by th Librar) of 194 1 he went to the University of New Congres and the lew ork Public library. Mexico as a staff member. Many of The niversity librar rank v ry high also i II it orwegian and his musical compositions have been Dani h coli tion. Raymond H. hove, head of th e acqui ition_ published. department of the library, xplain that th wedi h ollection, parti . -1917- ularl , ha been built to a top po iti n becau the founder of the Last summer Col. Richard A. Eric­ niver ity expre ed a conviction that thi in titution houlel mak a pecial eff orl Lo pI' rve the Swedi h ulture. son '17Ex, was appoi nted head of th e department of mi litary science at the Th niver ity' olher collecti on of calldinavian book are, b university. After receiving his army volume, as follow: Ofl egian, 10,349; Dani h, 10,037; Ie landi , commission at West Point in 1918 he 2,179; Finni h, 1,471; general candinavian, 2 6. Th re are also was sent to Europe. He later se rved in 4,810 bound volum of candinavian periodical. Panama and Hawaii and as an instruc­ During the war, hipmen t of book from th andinavian ountri . tor at West Point. From 1929 to 1936 ' ere topp d, hoy aid, but the n iv r it is no, fee i ing the war· he was an instructor in military science time output of the canelinavian publi h rs. weden ontinued it at the University o( Minnesota. During publi hing at a fairly normal rat throughout the war, h e plain d, World War II he se rved in Wasrung­ although azi·oe upi d orway and D nmark \II r for d to u p nd to~, D . ., South arolina, ali (orn;1 mo t of Lh eir regular publi hing nt rpri and was overseas for 13 months in the Many r que ts for loan of \ edi h mat rialL th r librarie f the Pacific area. nit d tate are fill d b the niv r it IiI rar , and s holar om to Dr. Charles A. Tucker ' 17D, for· Minne ta for material the ann L g t I wh r eo merly of Minneapolis and well known in dental circles throughout Minnesota, EPTEl-J BER, 1946 13

Chalmer Music o. of Miami and of the Twin City Retail Druggists' As- board of directors· of the Russell-wliller during the wa r flew on anti-submarine sociation. -1922- Milling Co., finneapolis. he is the patrols. He is survived by his wife, a Robert F. Gaalaas '22Ag, has been first woman ever to hold this position. on and a daughter and his parents, named superintendent of the To rthern Dr. Sullivan al 0 is chief chemist and harles H . halmers, '94E; '03 E, and Great Plains dairy station at Mandan, head of the laboratory control and re­ Mrs. Chalmers (Lillian Hatch hal- North Dakota. He assumed his duties search department at the firm. mers '95A) of Minneapolis. there on J ul y 12. Mr. Gaalaas has been -1923- Herbert L. Lewis '2 0A; '2 1 lA, edi­ with the department of agriculture Lt. Col. C. E. Axness '23Ext, finance torial director of the St. Paul Dispatch since 1927 and formerly was at the and budget officer in the Minnesota and Pioneer Press is in Europe as a ew Tberia Station, Jeanerette, La. adjutant general's office died last June guest of the British government. He where he was superintendent of the in St. Paul. A veteran of World War will tour England, France, Germany dairy station for 6Yz years. I, he worked for the state in various and other European countries to sur­ Mellie F. Palmer '22A; '22 ; '43MS, departments until appointed finance vey politic'al and economic condition. joint director of public health nursing and budget officer in 1941. -1921- fo r the division of public health and Roman Bohnen 23Ex is portraying Fritz B. Burns '2 1Ex, is in the build­ the community health service in Min­ the president in the motion picture, ing business in Lo Angeles and re­ neapolis, has been appointed as a mem­ "The Beginning or the End." cently put $2,500,000 in a venture ber of the state boa rd of examiners of Hibbert M. Hill '23 E has been spo nsored by Henry Kaiser which will nurses fo r the term ending May 1, 1947. named to a board to advise on the en­ ultimately mean $75,000,000 in homes he succeeds Ruth B. Freeman ' 4~- gineering future of the Panama Canal. a year. His brother, Robert . '24Ex, 43Gr, who resigned to become national He will serve as a member of a board also live in Los Angeles. He is a well­ administrator of the American Red of eight which will weigh rhe advan­ known attorney and is in the steel bu i­ Cross nursing service in Washington. tages of a sea-level canal against those ness. Miss Palmer fo rmerly served on the of an expanded lock system. In 1942 Angus H. Taylor '2 1Pharm, of Min­ state board from pril, 1943 to July, he left his position with the orthern neapolis, recently was elected presi­ 1944- tates Power Co. of Minneapolis to dent of the finnesola State Pharma­ Dr. Betty J. Sullivan '2_Chem' enter the rmy. He served as deputy ce utical ssociation. He also is head ·35Ph.D., recently was elected to the chief of the engineering division in \Vashington with the rank of lieuten­ ant colonel. Services were held in hicago and Students Mail in States Duluth for Capt. Paul L Lane '23D, by 46 plastic surgeon at Cushing General Hospital, Framingham, lass. who died last July. He formerly was a staff member of the niversity of Illinois ollege of Dentistr. He erved _6 month in the European theater as a plastic surgeon with the rID. Dr. Oliver G. Olafson '23D, left la t June for a two-month big crame hunt in frica. He went to Mo hi in the Bel­ gian ongo by plane. -1924- Last ummer Edwin H. Rian '_4. received an honorary LLD degr e at the Bob Jones 011 ge, leveland. Ten­ ne ee. Dr. Otto hasky '_4D. died la t ugu t in ~Iinneapoli . This summer Dr. Arturo Torres­ Rioseco '~4 M ; . lPh.D .. profes or of Latin-Ameri an Literatur at th ni­ ver it of alifornia, crave fj"e lecture in uatam. la at the iJwitalion of the pre ident of that country. Dr. Torre _ Rio e 0 1 pre idem [the Tn tituta Internacional de Lileratura Ibero­ american.! and the aUlhor of \'eml volumes in panish on lh novel and noveli t . John W . Wagner '_4ME, i chief development ngtneer at the 8.1(h3- rach lndu trial Instrument 0., Pitt­ burgh, Pa. 14 MINNESOTA ALUMNUS

-1925- an authority on conservation, trout Dr. Roland G. Scherer '27Md, is Dr. John W. Bradley '25Ex, is en­ fishing and hunting. chief of surgery at the Bozeman De - gaged in private practice in Colorado August D. Haedecke '26EE, is em­ coness Hospital, Bozeman, Montana, Springs, Colorado. He recently was ployed at the General Electric Co., and consultant in urology at the Fort released from active duty with the Syracuse ew York. He lives at 309 Harrison veterans hospital. Army. Onondaga Avenue, Syracuse. -1928- Dr. Mary Margaret Shirley '25MA; Victor H. Jones '26A, is a geologist Ruby E. Christenson '28HEc, was '27Ph.D., died last June in White with the U. S. soil conservation service, elected president of the Home Eco­ Plains, New York. Dr. Shirley was an Fort Worth, Texas. nomics Association of Minnesota at its instructor in psychology at Smith Col­ Clyde W. Lighter '26Arch, is an annual meting last June. lege. She was born in Orleans, In­ architect in Des Moines, Iowa. Julia Hakko '28N, is on the staff of diana and received her B.A. degree at Harriet J. Wood '26Ed, former the Veterans Administration at Duluth, the University of Indiana in 1922. teacher and principal in Minneapolis Minnesota. From 1926 to 1927 she was a teaching public schools, died June 25 after a For "exceptional service" during the assistant in the institute of child wel­ short illness. She was active in local, liberation of France, Lt. Col. Edward fare at the University of Minnesota and state and national educational assocIa­ G. Hellier '28Ex, has received the in 1929 she became an assistant pro­ tions. French Croix de Guerre with Vermeil. fessor. She remained at the university -1927- He served in France two years, partici­ until 1932 when she became a faculty Dorothy Jackson '27, has been ap­ pating in the battles of Brest and Nor­ member at Randolph-Macon Women's pointed to the faculty of Frances Shim­ mandy. College. She was well-known national­ er College, Mr. Carroll, Illinois. She Virginia Taylor '28A, managing edi­ ly as a child psychologist and several will teach in the English department tor of the New Ulm Daily Journal, studies of child psychology were writ­ and also will $Upervise studenr publi­ recently was named the best woman ten by her. cations. newspaper editor in the country by the -1926- Isabel E. Knutson '27N, professor of National Federation of Press Women, Marvin W. Cragun '26A; '28MA, interior decoration at the University of Inc. She came to New Ulm in 1942 is a librarian at Sacramento College, Cincinnati, spent last summer as a after editing weekly newspapers in Sacramento. California. graduate student in art at the Cran­ Wisconsin, ew Jersey and Pennsyl- Ed M. Franey '26Ex, is on the staff brook Academy, Detroit. Her first ex­ vania. -1929- of the Minneapolis Daily Times. He hibit of water-color paintings were ex­ Mrs. Albin S. Anderson (Maude G. is a veteran of 27 years in the news­ hibited last spring. Hogan '29N) is employed at the Quain paper business, starting on the Eau Richard F. Molyneaux '27, is head and Ramstad linic in Bismarck, Claire, Wisconsin paper. He is a state of the Detroit Minnesota Alumni As­ North Dakota. officer of the Izaak Walton League and sociation. Clayton D. Ford '29 ; '30MA, is professor of political science and direc­ tor of the school of government at Principia ollege Elsah, Illinois. Cecilia H. Hauge '29N; '29A, chief Leader in Nursing Education nurse at University Hospitals, has been IN ESOT' chool of ur ing, which i both the olde t and named chief of the nursing section in the department of medicine and sur­ the largest chool of nur jng in the country, will offer only the M gery, veterans administration, with five-year nul' ing cour e after January 1, 1947. tudent entering headquarters at Fort nelling. The vet­ the school thi fall, however, will have the opportunity, under the erans administration branch wit h old plan, of choo ing eith l' the three-year ba i cour e leading to is associated serves Minne­ the d gree of graduate in nul' ing, or the five-year cour e, leading to which she sota, the Dakotas, Iowa and Nebraska. the bachelor of cience degree. The 1947 yearbook of the National In annoullcing the adoption of the five- ear cour e a the mini­ Society for the Study of Education is mum training program it wa pointed out that th long-range nursing being prepared under the direction of need of the country call for highly trained nurs who under tand a committee headed by Professor Vic­ the incr a ingly compl x techniques of mediciTI . tor H. Noll '29Ph.D. Dr. 011, pro­ More nur e are needed right now and for the future, and the e fessor of education at Michigan State need cann t be met without a corp of highly trained women to College, has Jone re earch exclusively erve a teacher and admini trator in the numerou fields of nur - in the field of science teaching and has in 0'. The five-year cour e j adapted to fill th e e demand. Mi s written a textbook, "Teaching of Petry, chief of the divi ion of nur ing, U. . Public Health L~cile cience in Elementary and Secondary ervice, who wa formerly a i tant director of the chool of ur ing, chools." The yearbook, dealing this has commended Minne ota on making the policy oncerning the fiv ye, r with the teaching of cience, will year program. . . be presented at the annual meeting of Mi Katherin J. D n ford, dJrector of the chool of ur 109, the society next February. Professor explain that the need for more nurses i not due to the pre ent Noll served two years in the Navy hortage but rather to an ever-increa ing expansion of the function with the rank of lieutenant. He al'd of nur ing_ Care of war ervice ca ualtie .will extend a long ov~r Mrs. Noll (Rachel Perkins '24Ed; period of time, and the 0 er-all u of ho pltal by th entIre popu­ '36MA) and their two daughters live lation i con tan tly increa in 0'. at 152 rchard Street, East Lansing, Michigan. SEPTEMBER, 1946 15

Harold E. Stassen '29L, received his honorary degree of doctor of laws in Bates College, Lewiston, Maine, last ROTC Program Is Expanded June. He delivered the commence­ OL. R. A. ERIC ° ,professor of military cience and tactics, ment address. C has announced that the advanced ROTC program at Minnesota -1930- will be expanded thi fall through the establi hment of Transporta- Paul E. Arneson '30B, has been tion Corp , Quartermaster Corp and Medical Corps unit: . named director of the contact and ad­ The Tran portation Corp and Quarterma ter Corps unIt wlll be ministrative services division of the open to tudents in any college of the niversity who meet th~ .re­ veterans administration branch office quirement 'for entrance to the ad~a~ced ROTC cour e. Addlt~on at St. Louis, Missouri. of the e unit broaden the niver Ity ROTC program by ofIermg Kenneth C. Haycraft '30L, has been enrollment to non·engineering tudent not ordinarily qualified for regional counsel for the Minneapolis Anti-aircraft Artillery or ignal Corps, the two branche of the ser . office of the War Assets Administra­ ice currently represented in the department. The field of tudy in tion . He served overseas during the the e two unit will be related to the business, law. economics and war as a lieutenant colonel in the argicultural curricula. European campaign and recently re­ Enrollment in the Medical unit will be limited to medical and turned to active duty at Ft. Benning denti try students, and the cour es for Medical Corps enrollees will be Ga. offered in the Medical chool under the llpervision of army medical -1931- officers. Mrs. Richard C. Lindsay (Margaret A quota of 182 students for the advanced ROTC cour e ha been E. Ball '31Ex) and her two children allocated b the War Department to the University of Minnesota for are enroute to Okinawa to join Brig. the 1946-47 school year, Col. Ericson ha announced. Distribution Gen. Richard Lindsay '30Ex. They of this quota among the ervice branche \Iithin the department of will make their home there for a year military science and tactics will be as follow: Artillery (anti-air· and a half. General Lindsay is in com­ craft), 67; Signal Corp, 15; Quartermaster Corp , 50· Transporta· mand of the 316th bombardment wing tion Corps, 50. The Medical Corps unit quota will be e tablished of the first division, formerly the later. eighth air force, there. For the past five years they have lived in Washing­ ton, D. C. -1933- Star. Mr. Elston formerly edited the Dr. Norman L. Mistachkin '31Md Dr. Bennett S. Ellefson '33MS, has semi-weekly St. Peter Herald for five who recently returned from service been appointed director of the central years and was editor of the Worthing­ with the Navy has opened an office engineering laboratories of Sylvania ton Daily Globe for three years. In at 3903 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. Electric Products, Inc. In his new posi­ 1944 he became state capitol corres­ Dr. M. Kellogg Mookerjee '31Md, tion he will direct planning .of research pondent. Mr. and Mrs. E 1s ton has returned from four years service in for radio, electronic and lighting prod­ (Gretchen S. Stege '40Ex) and their the Army and has opened offices at ucts. two daughters live at 4104 Queen 3872 Green Bay Avenue North, Mil­ George S. Orlemann '33Ex, recently venue South Minneapolis. waukee, Wisconsin. retired after four years service as an Ralph Helstein '34L, former Minne­ During July Barton Paulu '31Ai artillery officer, has been named district apolis attorney, is president of the '32Ed; '34MA, was an instructor at manager of Studebaker whole ale oper­ United Packinghouse Workers of New York University. He is director ations in the Minneapolis-St. Pul re­ America. He" ent to Chicago four of KUOM, University of Minnesota gion. years ago \ hen he was appointed gen­ radio station. Susanne Fisher (Mrs. C. Menz, eral counsel of the orcranization com­ Kathryn E. Worrell '31N; '31Ed, is soprano and Clifford Menz 33A, tenor, po ed of 300 locals. coordinator in nursing education, ob­ appeared in a joint recital at the Uni­ Robert N. Jeffrey ' 4Ph.D., and Mrs. stetrics and pediatrics at Johns Hop­ versity on ugu t 12. ii s Fisher and Jeffrey Helen Lasb 30; '31M ; kins Hospital Baltimore. Mr. Menz now are residents of the '34Ph.D.) went by air last July to - 1932- Twin Cities and this concert was their Liberia, Africa \ here fro Jeffrey will Leif S. H arbo '32MA, has been first appearance here. Last winter Mr. serve a a resear h chemist with the named superintendent of schools at Menz joined tl1e staff of the Depart­ Firestone Tire & Rubber o. For the Winona, Minnesota. He formerly was ment of Concerts and Lecture at the past ten years he has been associated superintendent in Red Wing. University. with the niversity of Kentucky. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight L. Parker - 1934- Jeffrey i the daughter of Dr. William (Clara M. Krueger '32N) announce the O scar L. Bunker '34Ed, is director F. Lasby '03D, dean emeritus of the birth of a daughter last June. They are of the United States Employment Ser­ chool of Dentistry at the University. at home t 647 Cherokee venue, St. vice in Puerto Rico. Ella M. Schaar 4G ; '39 . is on Paul. Wilbur E. Elston '34A recently was the staff of the Veter~lDS dministra­ Dr. Leonard T . Peterson '32Md, re­ appointed news editor of the Minne­ tion, Los Angeles, Calif. cently announced the opening of hi apolis Tribune. He formerly was tate John H . Shaver '34Ex; '34-36, was office at 1801 K Street N. W. Wash­ capitol corre pondent fo r the Tribune fatally injured ugu t __ in an auto­ ington 6 D. C., for the practice of or­ and succeeds Paul . Swensson '29- mobile accident near \Vest Union, thopaedic surgery. He recen tly returned 30Gr; '40-4 1, who has been appointed Iowa. Mr. haver who had won a from service wi th th Army. managing editor of the Minneapolis national reputation as a corn breeder 16 MINNESOTA ALUMN

and production expert. was assistant has been appointed acting director of manager of the seed corn department public relations at Stephens College, of orthrup, King & Co. Mrs. Shav­ Columbia, Mo. He has been a mem­ er, the former Caroline Gage '37Ex, ber of the Stephens facu lty since 1943 and two children survive. and during part of the past year he Professor Merton P. Stoltz '34B; served as admission counselor. F rom '4 1Ph.D. of the economics department 1939 to 1941 he was coordinator of at Brown University, has been pro­ speech for the General College at the moted to associate professor. He came University. to. Brown University as a research as­ William V. Smith '37Ex, is now as­ sistant in 1934 and returned in 1941 sociated with Bronson West, adver­ as an assistant professor. He is a mem­ tising firm of St. Paul. He saw action ber of the American Economic Associa­ in Europe as a member of the 102nd tion . American Statistical Association, division and holds the Bronze Star. Beta Gamma Sigma and Alpha Kappa -1938- Psi. Elmer L Andersen '38Ex, recently -1935- was elected president of the St. Paul Adele E. Coffin '35Ex' '46ASp, will Gallery and School of Art board of teach at Margaret Fuller school in Min­ directors. neapolis this fall. She is one of several John E. Dorn, '36Ph.D., associate pro­ lessor 01 physical metallurgy at the Uni· Lt. Col. Robert R. Christo.fk '38EE, Minneapolis teachers, recently dis­ versity 01 Calilorn.ia, has been nominated of St. Paul is stationed with the signal charged from military service, doing lor a two·year term as national trustee of corps of the regular Army in anking, graduate work at the University under the American SOCiety for Metals. Dr. Dorn China. He expects to be at his present the G.l. bill and teaching at the same is especially well known lor his super· vision of War Research at the University station for two years. Mrs. Christofk time. Miss Coffin served 22 months in of California. Since joining the staff in and their four-year-old son hope to join the special service division of the air 1938, he has directed special research in him soon. Col. Christofk formerly tran port command in Washington, the shaping and forming of aluminum and served in various stations in the States D. C. Gladys Chamberlin '37Ed· '45- magnesium, an extremely valuable con­ tribution to aircraft production. as well as Panama. ' 46Gr, se rved at Buna, ew Guinea Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Gamson with a WAC detachment and will re­ '42MA, is assistant professor of educa­ (Anita Gordon '38Ed) wi ll leave this turn to her posi tion at Marshall high tion, specializing in the teaching of month for Buenos Aires, Argentina, this fa ll. Paul W. Larson '35Ed, for­ socia l studies at .Boston Universi ty. where Mr. Gamson has been assigned mer band instructor at Jordan Junior Glen J. Johnson '37 AgEd, has been by the State Department as vice co n ul High School, wi ll take a leave of 'lb­ named to the Minnesota 4-H club staff and third secretary at the American sence from teaching this fa ll to do at University Farm. H e was voca tional Embassy. graduate work in music at the Univer­ agriculture teacher at Grand Rapids, Dr. Charles H. Scheifley '38Md; sity. H e served in the European area Minnesota, until 1940 when he joined '42MS, who recen tly returned from the as a chief warrant officer. Hallie Brick­ the extension staff as assistant county Army medical corps, is located in ner '28Ex, and Linnea Peterson '45Ed, agent in Carlton county. He was agri ­ Roches ter, Minnesota, as a member ot also are studying under the GI bill. cultural agent in Anoka county when the permanent staff of the Mayo Clinic. Fred W. Gould '35Ed, is associated he en tered the Navy in 1944. As agri ­ Dr. Scheifley was a member of the track with the Minneapolis agency of the culture and fis heri es officer fo r the team and a star hurdler at th e Uni­ New England Mutual Life Insurance naval military government in the Truk ve rsity. Company of Boston. H e pe nt nearly Islands, he had charge of the agricul­ Philip M. Schroeder '38For; '41MS, five years in the Army and was released tural rehabi litation program fo r the recently returned from a special agent with the rank of major. islands. school sponsored by the Northwestern Professor 0 s w a I d C. Hoffman Stuart Rothman '37L, is state hous­ National Life Insurance Co. for agents '35MA, teaches at Concordia Coll ege, ing exped itor in Minnesota. H e was who qualify by meeting the academic Bronxville and is a leader in sy nodical named to the position las t June at a requirements. circles. meeting of the League of Minnesota Clara O. Sletten '38A, has left her Mrs. Wilbur Williams (Ethel H. Municipalities conve ntion. This office position as field director of the Ameri­ Maxwell '35A; '39MA) has been ap­ wi ll assist localities and builders in can Red Cross, Brooke General Hos­ pointed a member of the Ramsey pushing the n'ational housing program. pital, Texas. Mi ss Sletten joined the county welfare boarJ wi th headquar­ Mr. Rothman was employed by the St. Red Cross in July, 1943 and served ters in St. Paul. Mrs. Williams has Paul Bureau of Municipal Research for at Brooke since 1944. been active in social wo rk several years and se rved on the faculty Simon A. W cisman '38L, has re­ -1936- of the H arvard law sc hool of public turned to the practice of law in Minne­ Fred W. Thomas '36A, recently was administration before joining federal apoli s with the firm of Os anna and named head of the farm service divi­ public housi ng administration . He was Kotrich after three years service in the sion of General Mills, Inc. chief construction attorney fo r FPHA European area with the Army. H e - 1937- (o r several years, acting general coun- earned the ilver tar, Bronze Star, Dr. Halward M. Blegen '37Md, is el of the office of surplus property in roix de uerre and the Purple H earl on the su rgical staff of Western Mon­ 1945 and director of the FPHA pro­ while overseas. tana Clinic and St. Patrick's Hospital, gram division in Washington before -1939- Missoula, Montana. coming to Minnesota. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley F. lli so n are William H. Cartwright, Jr. '37Ed; Robert J. Sailstad '37Ed; '38MA, li vi ng in Akron, Ohio. Mr. Allison EPTEMBER, 1946 17

'39B, is working with the Ohio Box recipient in writing his thesis fo r a fi nd relief from dreary and thankle~s Co. master's degree. tasks. Most of the book was written at Dr. J. Harry Crawford '39Md ; Gerhard (Gay) P. Kretzchmar sea while Lt. H eggen was stationed '43MS, and Dr. Mary A. Schmidt '40 gSci , has accepted an assistantship aboard a navy assault transport in the '39Md, (Mrs. J. H . Crawford) an­ in the entomology department at the Pacific and he credits the same bore­ nounce the opening of offices in the University of Minnesota. dom that is the theme of his book with W ay-Penney Building, Watertown, Dr. Edgar F. Westrum '40Chem, causing him to write it. Excerpts were printed in the Atlantic lonthly in South Dakota. chemist at the University of California, three spring issues and a chapter ap­ Lt. Col. Carl N. Ekman '39Md, is was featured in an article entitled pears in the September issue of Readers commanding officer of the 58th field "Plutonium Laboratory" which ap­ Digest. This chapter will appear in the hospital's section at Garmisch-Parten­ peared in the July 6 issue of Life maga­ O'Henry collection of the year's best kirchen, a mountain sports resort in the zine. short stories. Bavarian Alps. H e has served in the Victor W. Ziebarth '40MA, Pine Army seven years and was commander City superintendent of schools, is the Carl H. Kretzschmar '41A, is head o( the 59th field hospital in France, first World War II veteran in the state librarian at Indiana niversity school Belgium and Germany during the war. of 1innesota to be named commander of chemistry. E. Forsythe Engebretson '39L, is ex­ of an American Legion district. Dr. Hugh D. Patterson '41 rd, for­ ecutive secretary of the orth Dakota -1941- merly of Brainerd, finne ota, now is Medical ssociation. Since 1939 he has " lister Roberts," a novel by Thomas practicing in \ olga, outh Dakota. been associated with the firm of Cox, Heggen '4 1 ,former humor columnist -1942- Cox and Pearce of Fargo. He has been on the Minnesota Daily, appeared re­ Lt. Norman G. Anderson '42Ex, of engaged in the general practice of law cently. It tells the story of the U t. Paul, recently released from the since that time with the exception of Reluctant's huttles between the Pacific a y's "Photo Joes" where he sen'ed two year of service in the avy. H e islands of "Apathy, Ennui and Tedi­ in both air and submarine assignments, spent IS months oversea with a PT urn" and the method the crew u ed to now is a tudent at Duke University. squadron which op lated in the Mora­ tai area and the Philippines. Dr. M. C. F. Lindert '39 fd , has opened an office at 161 West Wiscon­ Polio Research Program Started sin venue, Milwaukee 3, Wisconsin. H e recen tl y returned from military I TE I E re earch program on the ca u ~e of poliomy liti . service. A and on method of diarno i and treatment of the di ease. ha ~ James D. McTighe '39Ex, has joined been _tart d at the ni er it of Minne ota with the financial up· the Minneapolis advertising agency of port of the ational Foundation for Infantile Paral_ si . grant of Olmsted and Foley as radio director. 210,880 wa made available to tart the pecial re ear h pr o'[am During the war he was a special agent on eptember 1 and it was indicated that additional grants would of the counter-intelligence service of the be made. if needed, to continue the tudi ",hich were initiat d at Army with headqu'a rters in India and the niver ity thi umm r during the polio epidemi . The grant also se rved as an army public relations upplemented award of 517 000 alread ' made to the ni ersit officer in Washington. He formerly by the foundation for polio research. was a radio writer in Duluth and Min­ Eight department will cooperat in carrying on the re ear h neapolis. prooram- public health, bacteriolog neurolog , pathology, p di­ Marcdla B. Reinke '39Ed' '40MA, atrics phy iolo a chemi tr and pharmacology. Report on the formerly in the WAVES, and Lucille ad ance made in each of these fields in the all-out attack on the K. Bergerud '44Ed, have been selected broad probl m of the cau e and treatment of the di ea e will be made as instructors for the U. S. Army school as achieved, [or dependents of American military The grant to Minne ota for the continuing stud i a recognition personnel in Frankfurt, Germany. of the important work done b m mber of the medical taff in They were due in Frankfurt on ep­ poli re earch. Durino- the epidemi thi ummer the niv r ity tember 15. Miss Bergerud served as Ho pital provid d all po ~ ible pa e, facilitie and taff to the principal of Lincoln school in Roche s­ treatm nt of polio patient and also e tabli hed and maintained a ter, Minnesota, for the pa st two years. ho pital d partment in the health r i e buildina at ni er it , Eldon J. Spencer '39L, is in the gen­ Farm. eral practice of law in Blue Earth de­ Minnesota, v ith the firm of Mor e & b Frundt. He recently returned from ad- duty as a major with the judge ad 0 - ate generals department.

-194~ Bob Eddy '40 ; '43-44 r, telegraph editor of the St. Paul Pioneer Pre , received the International ir ulation Managers' as oeiation $750 graduate scholar'hip a\ ard for 1 46-47. The purpose of the awa rd i t assist the 18 MINNESOTA ALUMNUS

He recently received a citation for William B. Boyum '43Ex, has joined cause of the housing shortage, Mrs. meritorious photography from the the Westinghouse Electric Corporation Jacobs (Grace M. Thorkelson '43DE) United States Tavy Photographic In­ as a member of the Graduate Student and their chi ld are li vi ng temporarily stitute. He is working for a degree in Course. He is receiving engineering, wi th her parents in Fertile, Minnesota. zoology and plans to enter the field of manufaqturing and classroom instruc­ Last spring Argan N. Johnson '43CE, visual education. tion in the electrical industry. His returned from se rvice with the avy Reuben G. Klammer '42AeroE, is present address is 421 Rebecca Avenue, in uba. employed by Northrop Aircraft, Inc., Pittsburgh 21, Pa. He recently was dis­ Lt. Margaret B. Lamphear '43N, re­ of Hawthorne, California, in the re­ charged from the avy after serving 21 cently returned from duty in the Pacific search laboratory. On May 2 he went months as a radio technician. with the Army. on inactive duty as a lieutenant in the Dale G. Eckblad '43Ex, Navy air Mr. and Mrs. Earl H. Mosiman an­ U. S. Naval Reserve. He lives at 8511 corps veteran, died in northern Minne­ nounce the birth of a son, John Franz Rindge Avenue, Playa-DeloRey, Cal. sota while on vacation. He had served on June 29. Mrs. Mosiman is the for­ Barbara Knight '42A, has been four years as a bomber pilot, attaining mer June Simmons '43HEcEd. Mr. the rank of lieutenant, junior grade. Mosiman '43Ex ; '46, is finishing his nam~d associate director of religious education for the Minneapolis Church He was an assistant at Powers Depart­ work in radio speech at the University Federation. She received her masters ment Store, Minneapolis. Survivors following service with the Navy. degree in religious education at the include his wife and parents. Jeanette Ouren '43A, and Ellen M. Chicago Theological Seminary and fo r Dr. Roger F. Hartwich '43Md, il nd Rowley '43MA, have arrived in the Mrs. Hartwich (Helen Weyer '43N; Southwest Pacific to se rve as Ameri­ the past two years has directed r eligiou~ education at Westminster Church in '43PHI ) announce the birth of a son, can Red Cross staff assistants. Prior to Decatur, Illinois. In her new positioll Roger Frank, Jr., on July 11 in Minne­ her Red Cross appointment, Miss Row­ apolis. she will work with the United Christ­ ley was director of girl s' physical edu­ ian Youth council of Minneapolis and June C. Kjome '43N, is a mission­ cation 'at White Bear hi gh sc hool. Miss with the federat ion's visual aid depart­ ary nurse in Zululand, Africa. Ouren was a junior accountant for ment. James L. Jacobs '43ChemE, is pro­ Price Waterhouse and Co. of Chicago. Franklin F. Page '42A, has been ap­ duction su pervisor with the Monsanto Seth W. Peterson '43ChemE re­ pointed director of public relations for Chemical Co. of St. Louis. H e recently turned to the States last May after 21 the National Aeronautic Association was discharged from the Navy. Be- months duty as communications of- with headquarters in Washington, D. C. Mr. Page has been a reporter on the St. Paul Dispatch and Pioneer Press since March, 1944, and previous­ Films PrOduced on the Campus ly was with the Columbia Broadcast­ ing System and United Press. He will P EYTO M. STALL! G , Jr., newly appointed production manager also serve as managing editor of NAA's on the staff of Minnesota's department of visual education, wa two monthly publications and the as­ one of the three army signal corp men who made the motion picture sociation's weekly Washington News record of the entire uremburg trial . Anoth r new taff member, Letter. James W. McCarron, prod uction a si tant, erved with the navy in the Newton H. Stein '42A, returned Pacific and helped to .make "The Fighting Lady," the famed movie of this summer from 40 months of Navy the aircraft carrier's part in the war. duty. He se rved 36 months overseas on the USS Sperry, a submarine tender, The addition of th ese two veteran with out tanding war experience and the USS Tazewell, an attack trans­ in motion picture filming marks the re·e tabli hment of the film produc. port. Lt. Stein saw duty in the Marshall ti on work in that department, which wa abandoned during the war. Islands, Philippine Islands and Jap The vi ual education d partment, providing a wide range of service anese campaigns. to the chool of the state tands ready to help chool ,ith an y pha e Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Steiner of their film production. The production tafI recently a si ted the '42Ex, announce the birth of a son, Brainerd chool in compl ting a ound film of that ity' chool y tem. Richard Warren in August. Paul R. Wendt i director of the departmen t. Paul Warsett '42AeroE, is senior aerod ynamicist at the Curtiss-Wright Minnesota's film production department i larger than that of any Corporation, propellor division. He re­ other niver ity in the nited tate and a i t other college and cently received his masters degree in univer itie in thi type of work. dvice on the u e of film , lide and aeron autic'al engineering at New York other audio·vi ual aids in program planning i given to many chool in University after attending night classes the tate. for three years. In addition, a rental library of educational fi lm i maintained by - 1943- the Community Program rvice of the Univer it . pproximat Iy Dr. Alvin E. Akers '43D, and Mrs. 1,500 fi lm are available, a well a lide and recording. A total of Akers (Margaret M. M c Can non 9,259 bookings \ ere made la t year to school , civic organization, '43DH) are engaged in practice at churche ,and imilar group. new catalog of available material will 1596 W. 36th Street, Miami, Florida. be ready early in the fall and can be obtained b writing to Community Dr. Akers was recently di scharged from Program ervi e, of which J. . Lombard i director. service with the Navy after 34 months as a den tal officer. EPTElllBER, 1946 19

fice r on a tanker in the Atlantic and Jenane Patterson Binder '44A (Mrs. the East after playing at Army camps Pacific. H e is employed at the Minne­ Carroll Binder, Ir. ) in "One Crowded and a,1' bases and hospitals in the ~o ta Linseed Oil Co., Minneapolis. Hour." The boy of the book is Carroll outh and West. Ir. and Mrs. Raymond V. Rozycki (Ted) Binder, Jr., who at 23 was shot Last summer John Rue 'H ,sailed (Helen Lauritzon '43 ) announce the down aboard a Flying Fortress over from Pensacola, Florida, to Shanghai, birth of a daughter, Margaret Ann on Europe. Mrs. Binder in her own words China, where he will work with the July 21 In F:lirmont, Minnesola. M~ . and those of her husband, tells of their merican Friends Service Committee Rozycki '42ME, is employed by the short and happy life together, the days (Quakers) in their relief program in Fairmont Railway Motors, Inc. of lraining. the parting and the last Honan Province. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Thomsen (Eve­ months in England and Europe. Sam W. Thompson 'H-45Gr was lyn E. Firnhaber '43DH) Jive in Bell Mrs. Ralph B. Fairchild (Cora M. drowned in Lake finnetonka last June Gardens, California. Han en '44Pharm) Jiles at 101 Cal while on an outing. His home was in Wilbur Trombley '43 eroE, is doing lender I'enue, Peoria, Illinois. Pocahontas, Arkansas. research for Pratt-Whitney at East Edward A. Johnson '44 fd, has re- -1945- Hartford, Conn. turned to civilian practice in Omaha, Laura Mae Berdan '45B, is working Dr. Robert E. Van Demark '43MS ebraska, following service in the as an accountant in Los Angeles. in urg, is chief of the orthopedic sec· rmy. Ruben Miller '45 , has been award­ tion, regional hospital, Camp Joseph T. Richard P. Knapton '44GC has re­ ed the "Citation of Achievement" cer­ Robinson, Arkansas. For the past sev­ ceived an appointment as ensign, US T, tificate by igma Delta Chi, profession­ eral years he was an orthopedic sur­ at Pensacola, Florida, where he recent­ al journalistic fraternity. geon with the Army. ly finished flight training for three Donald C. Myntti '45ME, has ac­ -1944- types of aircraft. He was commissioned cepted a position with the mechanical Jane O. Batchelder '44A, received her all ensign, US R, in March, 1945 at engineering department of the Oliver M.A. in Government from George Columbia Unil'ersity. Iron Mining Company in Duluth. Washington Univer ity, \Vashington, Betty Polucci '44 , is touring the Rev. W. A. Poehler '45 I ' , has D. c., last spring. country with an all-girl U ..0. band. been appointed head of Concordia Col­ moving and memorable story of he has been with the band since last lege, t. Paul. He is the youngest man one AmerIcan boy's contribution to October and plays tenor saxophone and to hold the position of director of any I ictory and a free 1V0rld is told by clarinet. The unit now is featured in of the concordias of the fissouri synod. He formerly served as pastor of Trinity First Lutheran Church in finneapolis. Mrs. W. A. Purtell Jr. (tl1ary Louise Engineers Tdke Five-year Course immons '45:\), formerly of Green­ ville. outh Carolina, is living at 52 T RTING thi faIL engin ering . tudent lIill attend the Vnil r it) rchard Road. \Vest Hartford, Con- S of 1inne ota for fiv e) ar . in. tead of four. to get a diploma and necticut. "ill r ej, a more liberal ba kground of educati on a a re ult of a nell -1946-- program to be tried by th nil' r it)' In. tilute of Technology. Gloria H. Johnson '46HEc of lin­ neapoli is in Honolulu a an assistant B) th e addition of one more year of . chooling, the Ie hnolog) in food en'ice at the University of tud nL II ill be given liberal art cour e. in conj unction II ith their Hawaii. te hni al ul jects. eteran. reaj tering in the In titute Technolog) £ Robert . R dholm '46A, editor of II ill be allowed to take the four.y ar cour ,.ince th majorit of them the Univer ity 1946 Gopher has joined ar older and an'\ious t ompl t th ir edu ation. II other technolog the st:Jff of Olm ted and Foley, tl1inne­ Ir shmen r gi. tering thi. fall II ill b req uil' d t enroll for th broader. apoli adl'ertising agency, as assi tant fiv e- ear program. to the production manager. The plan of lib I'alizing th e engin ering ourse is an innOl ation Harriet J. Schmitt '46It, ba joi.ned tried on I) r centl b) til 0 other uni, ersiti es, ornell and Ohi tate. lhe taJI of Dougla ircraft ompan), Its aim i. to O' i,- an unci I' tanding of ba.i principles in different fields Inc., in anta Monica, alifornia. as of human kn "lecl ae. The aclded . tuelics lIill be diyided into thr e an aeronautical engineer. he recently main group:.. life. i nce, II hi h in lucl es botan), zoology and ps)chol. received one of three 500 scholarship og j . 0 ial ience. in ludin O' conomie.. political science and:;;) iolog). award offered b Zonta International and humaniti ., in luding I hilo 01 h) , Engli.h, history. fine art_ anel lO 1I'0men interested in aeronautical en­ ll1u.i . He r t fore, EnO'lish lIa ~ th onl) requir d ourse in addition gineering. to th te hili al.ubjecL -1947- With til increasing neecl for . p ialiJ;u ti on in te hnieal field .. the T 4 Kenneth L. Dean '47Ex, is onl lIay to acid liberal art studi " is to ex] and the time ~p nt in train· erving with the 63rd ignal pera- ing an ngineerin g tudent, sine a full four ears are ne d d to ail' tion Battalion in alzberg, u tria. He th e n e .ar basi and .peeialize cl tt' hni al CO liLes. he explai ned. 0 is the son of Perr L. D an '16 x, and The plan a. Ilorked out h) a committee haded b, Professor T. L. /lIrs. Dean (Blanche \laId '16:\) of J 0 eph f the In titute talL a;ld R. M. 001)'1' of th ~\rL .o lleg ails Ho~ kin. , ~finnesota, for the 8a me freshman rear program. addition of life sci en s in the -1948- " cond ) ear, so ial s ien 'e- in the third) ear. humanities in th e fourth William . Dale '4 x, died last ea r and OppurlUllit for hoic of d ecti, e courses in lh finh }ear. slimmer of poltomycliu at nil'er it) Hospital. He former! ' !i"ed III alick. ~13 , . o "YGEN TO BREATIIE i the most important thing in Linde Oxyaen i now so readily available Ihr:l 11 the world 10 one " bo is ill anu unable to get enough for need erer be /cilhout oxygen f or any plllpo.'je. 0,) ~( life from the air alone. but one of tbe many ba ic and e sC l1ti al prolluclt' f, Olll; The u e of oxygen in m dical practice has grm 11 CC-matcrial which, all toge ther, r quire rapidly in recent year . Ph ician havefoundit effecti v ing re earch and engin ering work with 0 er a lhir· in the treatment of certain t ype of heart di ea e, lhe earth' known element. shock due t o wound or injurie , following m ajor opera­ FREE: Physicians, nurses, /rachers, and olhers who would l,ke tions, and for numerous other iUne e . informalion on the availability of oxygen, and on the l'ClriOll s

of oxygen lhcrap.y equipme1l t, are invited to write f or (J COlli' (. The ncedfor extra oxygen i 0 frequent in ho pitals " OXYGE)f TnERAPY HANDBOOK." Ask for Honklet P -9. tha t m any of them, ins tead of d pending on cylinders of oxygen brought to the bed ide, now have convenient oxygen ou llets in m any rooms and wards. Oxyg n is brougb t dircetly to t he b d id through an un een " pipe­ line'· from a centrallylocated " bank" ofoxygen cylinder. u~! ?}~BO~~~P ~R~ R ------~I------~ I Oxygen is a principal product of Vnit of V ION 30 East 42n.1 Street ew York 17. C AR BIDE. It is upplied to ho pital - and in much Products of Divisions and nics il1cludc- grea t r amounts to industry for numerou ma - ALLOYS D METALS CHEMICALS PLASTICS producti on operalion - largely through The Linde ELECTRODES, C RBO S, AND BATTERJE Air Products Company. I NDUSTRIAL CASES A D CARBIDE.' Minnesota Alu...... ,--.

October, 1946 No.2 SERVING THREE GREAT GROUPS

OF PEOPLE

From statement by Walter S. Gifford, President, American Telephone

and Telegraph Company, at 1946 Annual Meeting of stockholders

,·It is not without significance that our Annual Report opens with thc statement that The Board of Directors of tIJe merican Tele­ phone and Telegraph Company present herewith the management's accounting of its stewardship for the information of stockholder, employees, telephone users and the entire American people who have entrusted to private enterprise the re pon ibility for carrying on this essential national service.'

"There is every rea on for the management of your company to treat equitably each of the three partie concerned, namely, the telephone users, the employees and the stockholders. For in the long run, the in tere ts of these three great group of people, individually and collecti\'ely, are mutual and interdcpendent.

"More and better service at the least cost i as much in the interests of stockholders and employee as it is of the telephone users.

"\Vell-paid employees with teady employment; with opportunities open to all for advancement; and with rca onable protection again t contingencies of illness, accident, death and old age are as much to the benefi t of telephone user and tockholders as to employees.

"A stable and fair return on the money inve ted in the business­ sufficient to attract the new money needed to develop and expand facilities - is as good for the telephone Ll sers and employees as it is for the tockholclers." WALTER s. en'FORO

BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM "A good pipe is an investment

()(,fOBLII, j 44(1 in daily pleasure", Only the Anest imported Mediterra­ nean briar is used in these handsome, sweet·smoking, Making Room for 27,000 Students easy-drawing pipes - set off and reinforced by a wo y ar ago when niver it) p al for Ii ing accommodation for band of sterling sil ver­ T official pr dieted thal within th r ord number of tudent-. Alum· fitted with hard rubber two year aft r the end of th \ ar ni and other. living in all part f bit; iust what you'd ther would probably be 22.000 tu· Minneapoli and t. PauL hay dent on the eampu~. the e timat opened room in their home l ni· expect From LHS. ounded a liltl on the fanta tie ide. ver ity tudent. Thi ooperation AT All GOOD DEALERS The peak pre·" ar enrollment wa ~ with the niver. it), on the part of about 15,500. Well, thi month there T\ in City re idents in thi em rgenc~ IMPORTED BRIAR are ome 27,000 fulltime da tudent hou ing ituation ha mad it po i· mod.1 i'91. Donn. of enrolled. Thi ear the ni erjt of hI for thou and. of tudent t con· handsome models# ploinorontique fini sh. Minne ota will probably give in tru . tinue their college career. thL fall. tion to more than 75,000 per on. Earl in the ummer there \\'a orne through it reO'ular daytime cia e, doubt that accommodation, could be th evening cia ondueted by th found for a many a 21.000 tudents. Cen ral Exten. ion divi ion. t h J ame Borre on ~nd hi taff in the ~ hool of gri ulture, and the hort niver ity' tudent - hOll inO' bur au COUf , offered by th Center for in the office of the dean of tudent:: ontinuation tud). the divi i n of energetically tackled th job of agri ultural eXlension and other d . buildin fir, t lIeek of th pre ent fall able la sroom_ ha, be n handled quarter a lOlal of 17.100 , tud nl ,ea· "ith a minimum of confusion in th son b oks \\ re , old. There ar nl tr mendously cro" d d situation. The 21.000 ::ocal" b llle 11 the goal line in -iz of many class group_ i, limited M morial ' lad iUl11. onl) by the capacit . of the rooms and th allle i true for th I rture e· I In 19·10 \\ hen offman Memorial sion, held in auditoriums of th \ar· nioJl II a" ompleled th r \\ re ome L iou, building on the campus. la_ses "ho criti il d the 0, t and size of start on the hour in tead of n the th impo ing building. It nOli turn. half hour as in the pa t and thfirst out thal the decision to 0'0 ahead 'Ia _ of the da L chedulued at eight \\ith the on"tru li on of th building 0' lock. Th numb r of student. II ho in that imm diate pre·\\ar p riod can be accommodated in laboraton II a - an n.tr meh fortunate one. But 5 tion i definiteh limited b, th~ f r oilman Union it i hardly pos. i. desk- and equipm ;It in_tall d ' \\ ith bl thal the lni\ crsity ould ha\ e th re.ult thal th laboratori" in er· carried out the poli of a epting the tain our e are in use from a. m. to regislraliollt- of all qualifi d finn· 10 p. m . . ota re"iclents \\ho lIi, h d to nter thi fall. E, en da . from morn ina lumni "ho re all th length\ line" lo nigh l, the b'uilding is ro\\cled t \\ hi hiler a part of the freshman apacit) ~1I1d be) ond. The kitcll'n r gUrati oll pro ednr - at the time and dilling facilities in th building th r entered the ni, r:;il, will un· II re d "igll 'd to sen e a peak load loublcdl) ha, ,i ion, f line;, a mile of rrom thi", fall luring regi::-tralion \\eek demand ror 12.000 meal;, a da~. "ere' shorter than in th e pre,"ar ) ears. This happ) situation \\,a" th 11 Re;,idl'nt~ of tl! T \\ ill iIi 5 r . resull of th program of ad\ UII r CT. Send lor your copy 01 :'pL>lld'd nohh to th 'ni, t'rsi l~ '" ap· istration instituted thi , past "lImme~. " Pipes-lor 0 World 01 Pleasure" L & H STERN, Inc ., 56 Pearl St ., Brooklyn 1, N. Y. I6ft~@n@)~@ IT@iS@)~@~ when General Electric t men and women retire

Every G e ner al Electric e mployee with General Electric as early as 1912. a year or more of service will be eligible The new program-one of the most ad­ to receive a life income upon retirement, vanced in the industry - is part of General offered under the provisions of the com­ Electric's long standing objective to help pany's greatly broadened and expanded employees provide security for themsel ves Pension Plan. and their families, both through the years This plan provides a pension for the of productive work, and upon retirement. years already worked, at no cost to em­ It is another General Electric "job ployees. For this, the company pays the dividend" like employee insurance, profit entire cost, estimated at $100,000,000. sharing, and financial help in case of sick­ To increase this retirement income as ness or accident. the years go on, employees and the com­ "Job dividends" like these help make pany will jointly contribute to the fund. General Electric a good p:ace to work. On the average, about two-thirds of fu­ They help to attract and hold the kind of ture costs will be paid by the company. men and women who are responsible for This plan makes 100,000 more employ­ the company's growth and success. And ees eligible under the company Pension they demonstrate General Electric's belief Plan. Over 40,000 employees were already that making good jobs is an important in line for pensions under plans begun by part of making fine products.

GENERAL _ELECTRIC

. o TOBER, 1946 25

Minnesota ALUMNUS Continuing the Minnesota Alumni Week. Iy which was established in 1901. Pub­ lished by the Genl

Vol. ;;6 October, 1946 No. 2

WILLIAM . GIBSON '27, Editor RUTH GUSTAFSON '40Ed, Editorial Asst. President 1. L. Morrill and omedian Fred Allen enjoy an Allen quip at the expense of omeone, possibly llen him elf, at the dinner in the offman I.e morial nio~ on tbe occasion of the formal presentation of the fund for a hean ho~pltal to the Lnlver- General Alumni Association 3ity of linne ota by the \'ariety lub of the orthwe t. DR. GEORCE A. EARL '06; '09Md, pres­ ident; RALPH B. BEAL 'IB, vice-president; ARNULF UELA 0 '17, treasurer; E. B. PIERCE '04, executive secretary. Board of Directors Honorary: THos. F. WALLACE '95L, CHAS. F. KEYES '96, EDeAR F. ZELLE '13. Representing Colleges: Science, Lit· erature, and the Arts: Lillian Mayer Fink 'lB, Mary Shepardson 'lB. Institute 0/ TechTUJlogy: Russell Backstrom '25, Theo· dore W. Bennett '31. Agriculture, Fores· try and Home Economics: Lucy Ashenden Jacobson '19, William E. Petersen '16; Law School: Joon K. Fesler '26, Paul S. Carroll 'lB. Medical chool: Dr. D(}uglas P. Head '27, Dr. Harold Benjamin '34. Dentistry: Dr. Bert H. Kerr '12, Dr. L. W. Thorn '15. Pharmacy: Charles V. Netz '20. Education: Clarence E. Blume '39Gr. Business: Frank J. Tupa '21. Mines: Walter H. Parker '07. School 0/ Agricul. eterans lub entenained at a reception for \ eterans in lJiIman ture: L. B. Bassett. mmitlee member. , left to right. Ken Jacob­ liT e orp; Renaldo Directors-at-large: Dr. W. H. Aur­ and 'OI Md, Carroll K. Michener '07. Ar· nold C. 0 s '21, Ben W. Palmer '11; , 13L, George A. Pond '1 BAg, rthur B. Fruen 'OBE, Harry Gerri h '05E, Rewey Belle Inglis 'OB, Orren E. Safford '10L. District Dire::tors: First District: Dr. Alexander E. Brown '22Md. Rochester. inth District: Dr. W. L. Burnap '97, Fer· gus Falls.

THE COVER PICTURE Football fans on way to Memorial Stadium.

The Minnesota AJunmus is publlshed monthly from September through June. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Minneapolis. MInnesota. un­ der act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Sub­ scription, $3 a year. If an ' ubscriber wishes ill magazine di continued at the piration of bis ub. Il ere are se\ eral member" of the tudent ommilte whi h i- in charg of the tuuent scription, notice to that effect hould be Home oming program on the cnmpu on ovember Band 9. eat d. left to right. William ent with the uhscription or at its e.~pira. R. Bus h, Janet IcDaniel. student huirman, an lain and Don foeller. Standing. lion. Otberwi e it i under tood tbat a Don~e Most, Barry O'Leary. Lyle Larson. Dal Engstrom, and Ruth Rainking. continuance is de ired. With 27,000 students on the ampus, ero/lid pictures are easy to get these days. Minnesota ALUMNUS

Vol. 46, No.2 October, 1946

News and Views

IMPRE IVE idelight on the The 22 em i-permanent building. veteran enrollment in the country. A crowded campus ituation duro if ecured, will be placed on the main Realizing fully our obligation to ing the fir t week of chool this fall campu , on the farm campu and at make a ailable to I'eterans the bene­ wa- the fact that nearl 27.000 tu­ Lniversity Village. the hou ing pro- fits given to them under Public Law dent \1 ere regi tered and a signed to ject on Como enue, for non- 16 and 346. the administratiye of­ proper cia ection with a minimum housing purpo e . ite for all the ficial of the Uniyersitl of Minne- of on [u ion. On the urfa e all building have been elected, and u e ota are leaving nothing' undone. ' _eemed perfectl orderl) and under for the tructures are de igned to control \.hich tand a a tribute to alleviate hortage of pace for clas. ­ Emergency Housing tho-e charged \ ith the planning of room , laboratorie. luncheon facil­ regi tration procedure. ities. student ' health er ice, tudy Temporary hou ing at niversity The facl remain of course that rooms and other critical need of th~ Village for married veterans has the place i crowded to uch an over· Un i\ ersit) in offering instruction to reached 236-family capacit)-. with 74 capacity exten t that provi i 11 mu t the unprecedented enrollment. more trailer ~ expected within a few be made for additional classroom and \I eeks. according to Frank Pearce. laboratory and offi e pace. It will be Temporary Buildings director of men' residences. recall d that _u h pace wa at a When the temporary hou ina pro­ pr lllium back in 1940 when the total It is planned to place four larg ject is completed, it will accommo· enrollment \ as near the 15.600 mark. H- haped building_. requested for date 900 families. The "aitin a Ii t transfer fro m Wold· Chamberlain ha_ approximately 1.150 name now, Expansion Field in the follol ing location on but according to the rate of accep­ the main campu : Bet\leen the lu- tance thus far. only about half the With nearl 27,000 tudenL en­ eum of atural Hi tory arttl the tudents on the li~t will want the rtJlled the !liver it of Minnesota Center for Continuation tud; ad· dll'elling when their name- come up. has the third large t studen t bod r of lOlDlng orthrop Memorial auditor­ Mr. Pearce aid. all) -chool in the nalion. In first and ium on Fifteenth ven ue; belli' en Of the lotal accommodations. 21-!­ econd place are the niver ity of the Main Engineering and th Experi­ will be trailers. 100 familie, will be alifornia and Columbu Univer it\. menlal Engineerino- building- ; be· in quolLet huts. 264 II ill be in metal There are near! 17,000 veteral; tween Washinaton venue and lll­ barrack_ and 96 are alI'ead) in the in the Minnesota ~ tud ent body. Il cenl and lurphy Halls. ompleted prefabricted huts. ' 11 huts is not felt that college and ' uni· n addilional 18 buildings are be· are built for two families. \ er ity enrollment ha e yet reached ing ought fr01l1 the TII'in Cit~ · Ord­ their pu lllar peak and that lbe peak nance plant at e~1 Brio-ht n and the The time n I'dI'd for completion of th project cannot be predicted defin­ enrollment ma) nol be reached until rmy ir Ba at 10UX it)'. 1011 a. the fall of 1949-50. ne building will be placed at Vni­ it!"l) _ but il is hoped ~hat 100 famili - The niver it of MinI! _ota ha- ver it) Village to be u, ed as a com- \I·ill be able to llIoye into quonset huts adopt d lh poli y of a eptin all lllunit) cent r for r reational and so­ aboul D . 15 and 264 unit of metal qualified Minnesota re idenls II ho cial facilities. elf·government as J1l­ 1 arra k_ ma, be Iini hed for us in wish to nter. Thou and of appli a­ bl) rooms and offi es. canteen and February. a ' ording to Mr. Pear . lioll from re-id nt of olher state­ stud) hall. Three of the _emiperman· PI) wood for door- and plumbing ha\"e b en reje l d. T meet th ellt buildings will be pIa I'd on the Ii:-.tures a1' the main bOltlenecks nO\I . needs of the surge of Minn sota stu· farm ampu-. Pl:e\ nting immediate u_e of the 74 delJls the niversil offi iah ha\ e In outlinino the ne ds of Lhe l"ni­ trailers not nO\l in use is the lack of souo- ht to lak advanlagc f \ ry ver _ it~ in the request [or th 22 build­ utilit) buildings for washing and po- ible mans of expanding. the ings. jJ)iam T. fiddl br ok. yi e haUling. AII Ule huts II-ill have plwnb­ fa i lilies. ppli ati ns ha\'e b , en PI' sident for bu_ine, s administra· ing. although prefabs nO\l in use filE'd I ith federal aoen ics for :.~ ti on. aid: "It _hould be born in are not equipped yet. \I ,ll" surplus buildino- to be IlIO\ >d mind thal during th last acad mi Huts and trail r5 arE' supplied b~ to the main and farm ampuses, The Year th niver_it) of ~Iinne ota. th federal publi housing adminis­ fucult has be n in l' ased lo 2.678 ranking am ng the first three laro- t trati n. The Uniyersit~ -upplie- the members and man addit itlllCl I staff state ulliversitie in the nilI'd tates. 101. streels aud -id "alh and brina;; 11lt'1l1ber_ are n I'd d. had the hierh ;;t absolute and relali\e utiliti s up t the buildings. <:" 28 MINNESOTA ALUMNUS

The University al 0 ovms the pre· The clinic will be staffed and di· man of lhe Univenity of Minnesota' fabricated huts which are erected rected by the University under the music department, has announced. now, allowing them to be used for technical direction of the speech Plan are underway for the organi· teaching a sistants and graduate stu· clinic, a department of the dean of zation of a student choru of from dents without regard to their veteran students office. 200 to 300 ingers under the dire . status. Plans for the project are announced tion of Dr. James Aliferis, newly ap· Half of the prefabs are occupied by Dr. Bryng Bryngelson, dircctor of pointed choral director at th Uni· now by teaching assistants, 37 by the: University's speech clinic, and versity. graduate students who were moved H. R. Gabrielson, acting executive tudents from any college in the out of Thatcher hall by the influx of director of the association making the tate may tryout for the chorus by teaching assi tants and 11 foreign grant. The mobile unit i one of ev· arranging for auditions with Dr. AI· married student who cannot find eral activities of the association iferi in the University's Music build· rooms elsewhere. Only 5 per cent financed by it annual Easter seal ing. of the FPHA huts can be occupied by sale. The choru will appear with th nonveteran faculty members. The clinic will travel to every coun· Minneapolis Symphony orche tra Cost to the veteran of future dwell. ty in the state over a period of three under the baton of Dimitri Mitrop· ings cannot be e timated. Present or four years until all Minne ota oulo in a twilight concert on Sunday. monthly rents are: tandard trailer, children have been tested for hear· December 8. $27.50; expansible trailer, $32.50; i.ng and speech. The hool system , prefab, $35. Rents include basic fur· public health organizations and civic niture, electricity, hot and cold water group in each community have been Honored and oil for space heaters. Bedding, invited to cooperate in the project. We lie W. Olson '32B, of QUll1CY· linen, kitchen utilities and cribs are Testing and counseling will be of· Illinois, wa one of the American Red not furnisheJ. fered to public and parochail school Cross workers to be awarded the pupils and pre·school children who Medal of Freedom on August 27 by World Trade Study are referred by agencies to the clinic. General Dougla Mac rthur. H served with the Red Cros in the Twelve experts on foreign trade, Chorus Pacific area from February, 1944 to from various fields of business, gov· College students ,throughout Min· July, 1945. On September 16, Mr. ernment and education, will make up ne ota will have an opportunity to 01 on was appointed di trict manager the faculty for an extension course on sing in a chorus appearance with the for the Equitable Life As urance o· world trade to be presented this fall Minneapolis ymphony orchestra in ciety. His office addre i 416 by the Northwest Foreign Trade club December, Dr. Paul M. Oberg, chair· W.C.U. Bui lding, Quincy. under the educational direction of the University of Minnesota. Roy G. Blakey, professor of economics at the Univer ity, is the cour e director, Fall Quarter Enrollment by Colleges with W. J. de Winter as chairman of t!te educational committee. Here are I he enrollment figures by colleges at the end of the second The course, first of its kind spon· week of school this fall quarter and a comparison with the enrollment ored by the two groups, will be in the fall quarter 0/ 1940. The final official enrollment figure for conducted October 1 through Decem· the present quarter will probably be above 27,000. ber 17, with session every Tuesday Fall, 1940 Fall, 1946, Difference Fall, 1946 from 7 to 8:40 p. m., in icholson College Enrollment Enrollment* in per cent Veteran Hall on the University campus. Reg· General college 966 1,985 plus 105 1,275 istration is under the general exten· Univer ity colleg 45 153 plus 240 76 ion divi ion of the University. LA 4,699 9,897 plus 111 5,321 Designed to meet the need of lnst. Teach . .. "" .. 2,224 5,4,17 plu 143 4,751 young men and women employed by Ag., For try, Home Ec. 1 511 1 755 plu 16 1,033 firm engaged in export trade and of Law " 291 568 plu 95 504 tho e who wish to prepare themselves Medi in 527 364 minus 31 110 for uch employment, the course will Med. Tech, r.ray Tech. 71 119 plu 67 8 feature a lecture each week by a Phy . Therapy 49 15 pecialist in orne pha e of foreign ur in g 450 644 plu 43 21 trade, followed by a discussion per· Public Health ur· iod. ing & Public Health 121 312 plu 158 167 D nti try 196 262 plu 34 159 Speech Clinic Dent. Hygiene 105 94 mmu 10 159 Phanna 204 351 plu 72 271 A o-rant of $15,000 to the Univer· Educalion 1,322 1,442 plu 9 594 ity of Minne ola from the Minne ota Busine 607 1,242 plu 105 1,063 As ociation for Crippled Children Grad. hool 1,432 1.991 plu 39 1,087 and Disabled Adult , Inc., will fi· nance a mobile p eeh clinic to sur· TOTAL 15,068 26.645** 164,60 vey the speech and hearing needs of school children throughout the state. OCTOBER, 1946 29

A Time of Test and Trial

Address given by DR. J. L. MORRILL, president of the University, at the opening tudent Convocation in orthrop Memorial Auditorium

CH autumn it i the function of him elf a historian, had helped to for the faculty. lhe member of our E the pre ident, in mo t colleges build, upported and trengthened to Minne ota faculty look upon their and univer ities to welcome the new thi da by other di tingui hed fac­ profe ional re pon ibilitie in these and returning students. Mo t presi­ ulty member. everal of the e men changing time with differing con­ dent I am ure regard the occa ion I have come to know per onally and viction and back

In that sen e. too, you are w I f r ou are pa~tn r_ in pI' - sentin 0' t th ni r ~it \' of Minn - -ota and to th citizell~ of Minne- ota, wh ha prid and propri tor. Bu t let me sa til 0 thing::,: the op· ship in it. th hall I1ge of , id r portu nity t get an du ati n is still dim l1 ' i n and a o-reater de tiny. 32 MINNE OTA ALuMNu

Participants in the program at the Heart Hospital dinner were William Elson of Minneapoli , left, a national director of the Dr. Harold S. Diehl '18Md, dean of Medical Science, left; Hubert Variety Club of America. who introduced Fred Allen on th II. Humphrey '29, mayor of Minneapolis, and Ray M. Amberg '20, dinner program, i shown here ","ith Mr. J. L. Morrill and superintendent of Univer ity Hospitals. Governor Edward J. Thye.

Variety Club Presents Heart Hospital to University

EARLY 1,000 guests were present to provide 25,000 annually toward neapoli , a national director of ar­ N at the dinner in Coffman Union the upport of the heart hospital. iety Club of America. on September 23 when the Variety peakers on the dinner program, in A feature of the program will be Club of the Northwe t presented to addition to Pre ident Morrill and Mr. the pre entation of a life member hip the University of Minnesota a check Anderson, were Governor Edward J. in the Variety Clubs of America to for approximately $250,000 for the Thye, Mayor Hubert H. Humphrey 0_ J. Arnold of Minneapoli , pre i­ con truction of a hospital for the of Minneapolis, William McCraw of dent of the orthwe tern ational treatment of heart ailment. Dallas, Texas, former attorney gen­ Life In uranc company, in recog­ eral of Texas, and now executive To be known as the Variety Club nition of hi ervice as tru tee of director of the Variety Club of funds rai ed in the heart ho pital and Heart Hospital, the new tructure will America, and Dr. Harold . Diehl ther Variety Club campaign _ The be erected on the bank of the Missis· '18Md, dean of Medical ciences. pre entation will be made by R berl ippi River adjacent to the present Mr. Allen wa introduced by a per- O'Donn II of Dalla national ch ief g:cup of medical building. The hos­ J. onal friend, William EI on of Min- barker of th e organization. pital will provide approximately 100 beds and will specialize in the treat­ ment of rheumatic fever in children. It i hoped that the Variety Club fund will be supplemented by a federal President Morrill A ccepts G ift gIant under a ho pital construction THE name of the University of It i the rai ing of humanity t it. act pa ed by the ia t Congress. I Minne ota, it Regent, faculty, hio-he t, practi al level. to which a Fred Allen, radio and film star, and friend , I accept thi gift with the grcat in litution like thi niver it came to Minneapolis for the event mo t p:ofound and grateful appreci­ is committed. Thi , th ni ersity and he presided a ma ter of cere­ ation. stri es to do, through t aching, moni . The pre entation of the fund Only Dean Diehl and his colleagues through re arch, and through pub­ to the Univer ity wa made by A. W. of the Medical cience are compe­ lic ervice of a hundred kind . Your Ander on of Minneapoli , chief bark­ tent, of course, to apprai e its lon g· gifl move u forward in all three er of the Variety Club of the orth­ range ignificance-and what it can directi n . It may con tribute furth r we 1. The check for more than $250,- mean to the health and happine J to the pre-emin nce of thi ni er ily 000 r pre en ted -th fund rai ed by our p opl . But I am rem mbering, a a pion er on the fronti r of medi· thi organization of theater men in at thi moment, a great scholar and al di ov ry- this tim 111 an area an inten ive campaign conducted dur­ philo opher who lived 300 y ar ago till larg Iy un plored. ing the past year. The fund include and who help d to build the melh d In making pos ibl oppor· ome $68,000 contribut d by theater of cience in the modern world. 1 tunity for the ni r it of finne· audien e, a $15,000 appropriation am thinking of the great De carles ota, you la upon our cienti t , ur from the ariety Club' charity fund who on e aid thaL "If ever the hu­ 00 tor and nur es, a great chall nge and $30,000 contributed by member man race i raised to its highest prac· and a gr at respon ibility whi h they of the club. The balance consi t of ticall vel, intellectually, morally, and are eager to a cept-on whi h will donations olicited by club member. physically, the sci nce of medi ine f u nation wid att ntion upon uur The Variety Club ha al 0 pledged will perform that ervice." ou har with u in all o TOBER, 1946 33

mong tho e at the head table at tbe Hearl Ho pital dinner wer , left to right. Mal olm 1\1. Willey. vi e pre ident for academic Mr . Allen, known to radio Ii tener a Portland Hoffa, at near administration; Mrs. Harold . Diehl; Dr. Irvine .\IcQuarrie, head the center of program acti ity with Dr. Morrill and Toastmaster oC the department of pediatric in tbe ledical chool; Mr. Allen. In Iinneapoli be vi ited with her si ter, Ir. Guy L. Edward J. Thye, and William T. \1iddlebrook. vice pre ident for Bond, the wiCe oC Prole or Bond of the College oC Education of busin admini tration. the niver ity.

d tiny the chance to urvi ~ and to part of the countr). \I'ere pumpina pread it influence upon the face of away. It brought a lump to your the eaTth. throat. There were patienL in ome But the victorie of peace are now bed, little children and grownup the one for which we long-the hope alike with tube cut into their throats of peace it elf which eem till faT to pro ide ox Taen under pres ure. off, the victory of humanity over it. Their breathing \ a kept going b 0\1 n hortcomirg of good will and the pul ator vest "orn by wartime good en e, of d slTucti e emotion aviator in high altitude. core of of the economic handicap of di ea e extra nur e recruited from e ery­ and ph ical ill·bella. On that great where were on duty day and niaht. fTont and in tho e cTitical ector, the core m re of volunteer women were victorie are till too few. They are helping in e\-er - way. ome of the not a pectacular. but for tho e in doctor and nur e were working 18 th fight there i the ~ ame call for to 20 hour at a tr tch I know au devotion and elf- a riIi e, for every will b pI a ed that, becau,e of the in trument of - i nc and training kindne. of a Yariet · lub member and can UIDmat kill. her tonight, 50 of these young in­ antime, \Ie human beings are in ternes and nur.e are in thi audi­ th blind grip f an enormou incon- ence) . j tenc aren't we? We take war and The dim s and dollar that you and prepaTation for war which mean - the I and ,\merican e\ erpdle;' ha\e death and de uu lion of our \I orId given in past campaign, without n ighboT, for «ranled. Y t \ ef) thinking much ab ut it, \ler pourina re our e of modern medical and Uf· back into thi community for treat­ gi al kill i mobilized to repair, if ment and r search in an amount run­ po ible_ th mi er we ha e delib T· ning illto the hundr ds of thou-ands. at I planned. I cam out f th se corridor. just ew paper wTiter and otheT .. lat - a u \I ould have. in on ense great­ 1 , have pointed oUI that our wilful ly d pres" d and maybe a little fright­ arel ssne. S, or \I OT e, in dTi ing en d, \I ith a hearta h of ympath~ aul mobiles tak a h ayi r toll right for thos stricken and their loved h re in Minn ' ota than th dread f­ one, But I f It, too, th great heart f t- of the di which ha­ lift that ome. from , e ing the good ummer and fight \, II fought, from the knowledge that human sympath, and acrifice and. f\'i pour out in a flood when p opl ar tou h d b traged ·, I felt tIl a .uranc that h r , the highe.t lion, hav re-our e- f gener u human intelli- h r s who courag and and 5 ien and . kilL \,-er "ave.> thi nation and its d ( ontinu d on page 4) 34

University Requests Property for Research Center

" coml rehensive moye to en­ Of the 1 570 acre, 400 acre would field of j t propul ion, electr nical­ I lara il educational and research be allocated to crop breeding and ly guided mi ile, dir ction-by-com­ facilitie _ the niversit of Minne- le ting, 450 a re to animal bre ding mand mi ile, ub oni , tran onic_ ota ha ~ mad application to the War and 458 acres to dairy produ tion and up l' onic. The rmy and As el Admini tratlOn for acqui i­ and management. The balan e of the favy, 1h ational Re ear h ouncil tion of 7,200 acres of the Gopher tract, 262 acre consi ting of a taff and th ational Advi ory Committee Ordnan Work at Ro emount along hou ing area. road, fenced-in area, for eronauti s are all intere ted in with 167 of the powder plant 697 fire lane , borrow pit and alvage thi project Dr. Morrill di clo d_ building and a great 111all) item of yard and old farm tead" i con- and are formulating plan for tr - equipment. idered unsuited to agricultural pur­ mendou re earch undertaking to b Tran fer of the reque ted property po e except for 150 acre ,hich will a ign d to the cent r. to the Univer ity. if accompli hed, be utilized for _torage and hou ing. Al 0 included among the niver- will open a new era in the niver­ it s plan for the form r ordnan e sit) ' development as an educational Soils Research work i exten i u e of available and re earch in titution, Pre ident facilitie for medical re earch and Morrill declare , and will et in mo­ gricultural engineering and oil graduate tea hing in phy iology and tion plans for con vel' ion of the ord­ tuclie will be integrated with other to upplement the out-patient depart­ nance work into a "la ting monu­ use of the land, according to Univer- ment of niversity ho pital . ment to con tructive progre ." ity plan, and it i not propo ed at niver it plans for it projected pre ent to et a ide eparate area p­ pe dic medi al re_earch pro j ct "Rosemount laboratorie ' include the cifically for agricultural engineering include tudies of can er, poliomye­ establishment of a new upersonic and oil re ear h. The area pro­ liti, problems of aging, long-tim research center for aeronautical en­ posed for animal breeding will also toxic effect of radialion, d layed ef­ gineering and utilization of the land, be utilized for poultry bre ding and fects of e po ure to high altitude con­ building and quipment in upple­ management. dition and oth r problem in experi­ menting pre ent inadequate labora­ Facilitie now a ailabl to th mental m dicine which are a part f tory and re earch facilitie . Univer ity locally for agricultural the activities of the niver it medi­ experiment are very inadequate for cal chool. E sential to e ral of the Experiment Stations effective ervice. Th niver ity farm medical research project, colonie of animal u ed in e. periment will b Divi ion and function of the Uni­ m t. Paul utgrew it acreage many year ago with the encroachment of hou ed in building at the Ro emount vel' ily_ according to Dr. Morrill, ite, thu helping to r lieve th crowd­ which are prepared for almo t im­ ervi e. laboratory and office build­ ing. While it was formerly po ibl ed condition exi ting in 'lillaI'd hall mediate exten ion of their operations on th Main campus. to Ro emount include agricultural, lo lea e land in the vicinity, the re­ mechani al and civil engineering, the cent expan ion of re idential ec­ agricultural exp rimenlal tali on, the tion in norlhwe lern t. Paul and Accepts Gift engineering experiment tation, the adjacent area i teadily hrinkino­ (Continu d from Pag 33 medical chool' cancer and polio re- the available land. Much of the area earch program , the phy ic depart­ till available i low grade agricul­ mobilized- at, ork in the truo-gl to ment, the chool of public health, lural land, poorly uited to ientific ave liv ,not to de troy them. Army and avy ROTC unit, phy io­ work. The awful drama of destruction logical and aviation medicin , animal The actual acreage own d by the through whi h we have lately lived­ husbandry, the botany departmenl, niver ity and u ed by the agri ul­ a of lh ro-bomb 0 r Brilain or and niversity Ho pitals. tural exp rimenl tation al Uni rsity the atomi cata trophie of Hiro- The proposed expan ion of the farm is Ie than that owned for like hima and agasaki leave a di hearl­ Univer ity j planned to care for the purpo by any other tate exp ri­ ening after-thought. How 0"1' atly for educational needs of thou and of ment tation in the orth Cenlral our actual anity in thi war- arred tudenl each year and to contribute region and i Ie than half of th world mankind need to regain it to the critical national research pro­ area in anyone of the Iowa, Kan a _ If-re p t, lo make ome humane gram e ential lo the national de­ Michigan, Indiana, ebraska or Ohio am nds in the kind of con tructive ef­ fense, education and public welfare, tate agricultural e p riment ta­ fort that ollr gift make po ibl. tion . Dr. M rrill e plained. +t it * One of the major divisions of the Univer ity's propo ed Ro emount Aeronautics I lhank yo u, Mr. nder on, and project i an agricultural re earch yo ur a 0 iales, in th name of thi center which would utilize a tract of 110th r major proje t plann d by niv r it . We are immea urably n­ 1,570 acre of the we tern ide of the the Univ r ity for it 'Ro mount co urag d by thi gift - perhap' ordnance works property. Thi area laboratori "i the e tabli hment and "hearten d' i th b tter word!-and i rea on ably level, fertile and suited op ration of a huge re earch center we ar d ply resolved lo de erve by to th typ of agricultural experi­ for basi and development r earch prof ional int grity and commit­ mentation propo ed for th site. in th a ronautical and ordnance ment the onfidence impo ed. o ;TOIJER, 19~6 35

With the 1946 Minnesota football squad composed largely of and a group of assistants. These men. all former Gopher players, first year men, there is emphasis on the training of future varsity are. left to right. Walter Ohde, Gene Flick. Ray King. John talent on the reserve squad which is in charge of John Roning Roning, Bob Johnson, and Wally Johnson. Gophers Face Tough November Schedule

the) fumbled a doz n times. The Go­ ,ears ahead. "as the fa t that 2 of pher made the r coyeries on half of the 43 are first \ ear men. Th se men the. e fumbles but the Indiana deIen e "ere cr tting tlleir fir~t compeliti\ e \\-a __ uch thal the Iinnesotan could e:'l.periellce in conference football and not capitalize on the coring oppor· mo. t of them "ill be elicrible for three tunitie offered. In the fir. t half. more . easoll__ The freshman rul potential Gopher corinO" drive_ were "hich limits competition to three • topped on the ix.yard line. the 10 , ar \\ ill not IYO back into effect until and the 25. The cor at the end thi "inter. The si}.. seni rs on the of the first halI II a 0·0. squad are Bill Baumgartner. Herman Frick ). T 111 ate~. Herb Hein. ler· In the second half th \'i.itor p r· land Kispert and Bob arley. In· formed like hampion a they _cored i uries haye handicapped Frid.e~ , til 0 tou hdoll ns in the third period Hein. ates. Baumgartner and Carley and another in th fourth. Thruucrh­ thu far in th sa_on. oUl th game, Iillnesota made onl\ In the follo"ing group of 40 o· lhree fir, t down "hile Indiana O"ot pher "ho are leadiuO" candidate. for 21 and the Hoo ier had a t tal yard· team po ~ itiolls this \ l'ar there are :..6 age oain of 361 } ards to fo~ lh first) ear p rformers: Gopher ~ . Milmesota completed t" 0 E 0 Bill Baumgarln T. Bud rant, Hopeful ~[j n n s t a fans ap· forward pas es and Indiana ix. 'me agne, I1tO"rb lIein, Larn Halen· proachcd the I ndiana game II ith the kamp and ordon ' oltau. . feeling that b) , 0111 bit of oa hinD" First Year Players T'- KLE':- - Bill Carroll. ?llel ravich, I g rd main. B rnie Bi rlllan and hi Jim ;\lc OH'rn. Iink:\Ie to"an, .\Ierle :\Ioehn\"e, Bob ?IlealC:') and Dean ' \\ id-eth. a i tanL had produ d a I am 1\ ith \ . the lOlal ) ardag iudi ate_. th L RD ' B b Dalliebon. "alt Ed· ev n first vear III n ill th Minne ota offen. fail d to eli k. It ward Don lIelker, Lan) Honn. Leo lineup \\ hich \\ ould gi\ th _h uld b noted that T mate. num· omdlini. Larr) OI-ono~ki and huck all· nior 19.J5 hampions a I b r ne left halIba k did not pIa be- Della"'o. football. au.e f inj uries uffered in the i'\ . E TER ,""rarrell B son. ~ Iayl Tonne. maker, Don I"on and ~ l<'\t' ~ i1ianofT. bra ka game and al 0 thal hu k Q .\RTERB.\ K' Bob ' andberg. Bill l'Y r O"u lar ricrht haUback. played Thi Ie, \rerland Ki.p<,rl and Ralph .'lIe· onl) about t"o minute before h "a. _'-Ih,ter. for ed to ,the sid lin with an inj ur '. I-L\ LFB \ K':- huck A, en. Bill B I' In an effort to find an ff ti" om· Tom ale>, E, eretle Fuun~e. H~rm'a~ Fricke). Waller TIau ken. J a·k ?llel eill bination, both for the d f nand th ' and Buu \'\' heeler. off n e, B rnie Bi rman used a total FLLLB.'- K K n Beier.. d rL Bill EI. of pIa) er agaiust Indiana. liott, Di I.. Lutz and Jim :\Ialo k '. n ctob r 12 at Evan ton. th Th Indianan also gav a d mono th from lh outlook opher", pia) d st1'On (T O"ame and strali oll of errors t b a oid d wh n urrl'nt '" 3"on and for the "ho\\' d mark d impr "em nt both 36 MINNESOTA ALUMNUS on offense and defen e although they II ard· and P te Tap ak, guard. R­ bowed to orthwestern, 14 to 7. In porting later from the football squad the fourth quarter the Minnesotan will be Buzz Wheeler, a regular guard drove from their own 27 to the orth· on the orthwe tern ba ketball team we tern one.yard line but 10 t the la t a on while in the avy; Ever­ ball at that point when a fourth down ette Faun e, who played , ith Iowa play failed to core. The drive wa tate whil in a a traininO' unit parked by a 51·yard gain on a pa there; CIa t Tonnemaker, an all-city from Herman Frickey to Herb Hein. tar II ith Minneapoli Edi on; Bud The Gophers made a total of 322 -Grant, a regular guard and fan ard yards from crimm age to 317 yard la t ea on for Great Lakes. and Bill for the Wildcat. orthwe tern Barroll, 6 feet 5 2 center. scar d on the fir t play from scrim· mage when chenbrenn r ran 68 Cross Country yard. In the second quarter the Gopher completed pa e to advance Cro country returned to the Min­ into coring territory. lateral from nota intercollegiate sport schedule andberg to Faunce re ult d in a lhi year and Coach Jim Kelly' run­ ner defeated ebra ka, 28 to 27, in ~ 7 yard gain and Beiersdorf plunged BOB ANDBERG for the touchdo\ n. A long run put the fir t m et of the eason on ept. the Wildcat in po ition for their ec· 28. in Minneapoli. Roy Good of Outll eighed the plucky and hard light­ Minne ota fini hed in econd place and touchdown. Minnesota threw 16 ing Comhu kers ,ho k i I full and other Gopher among the fir t forward passe and completed 16. handled the T formation in driving ix to cro the fini h line were Bob over 60 ) ard for their on touch- Brown, Dave ewman and herwood Nebraska Game down ... Bernie Bi rman u ed 45 elan. player ... Minne ota made 16 first In the fir t game of the ea on on M Club eptember 28. the Gopher took to down to en for ebraska and in the air, to defeat ebra ka 33 to 6. total ard gained had a 323 to 167 Minne ota "M·· club, organization completing 12 of the 15 fan ard pass· ad antage ... Minne ota gained 124 of Gopher leuermen in all sport, now e attempted. In the opening minutes yard with forward pa es. ha headquarter on th campu in of the game Minne ota lost two key the office occupied by hester Roan, players through injuries, Tom Cate , Basketball a i tant to thletic Director Frank left halfback, and Chuck Dellago, Dave MacMillan tarted hi twenti­ McCormick, and Oli Dypwick '33, right guard. Cates uffered a houlder eth year a Gopher ba ketball coach director of port information for injury which may handicap him for thi month II ith a quad of more than the athletic deparlment 208 Cooke some time while Dellago came up 150 andidate . The group of 12 Hall. Mr. Roan erve a ex cutive with a fractured leg bone which will lettermen on the quad include e en ecretary of the club. keep him on the ideline for a good holdover from last ea on, Jim Me­ Well Wright, former Gopher ba - part of the sea on. lnt re and Don Matt on , center ; ketball player, now a Minneapoli at­ Everette Faunce, first year man Loui Brew ter, Ed Kernan and torney, i pre ident of the club thi from Fergus Falls, stepped into the Charlie Mohr, guard , and Dave Rul­ year. The other officers are Vernal left halfback as ignment and parked iff on and Harlan Whit , forward - (Bab ) Le air, fir t vice pre id nt; the Gopher offen e by completing 11 and five others who have been away Franci (Pug ) Lund, econd vice of the 12 pas e he threw and he wa from college basketball for orne time pre ident; Juliu PerIt, trea urer, and al a the leading gainer along the while in ervice: W Windmill r, William G. Bloedel, secretary. ground with a total of 55 yard in Duan Baglien, Bill Pepp r, Chet On the board of director are Doug 11 running play. Top receiver wa Tomczyk and Jo Knoblauch. Roo , Robert E. ha, George Mac­ Quarterback Bob andberg. Among the promi ing fir t year Kinnon. Ralph Engebret on, Dr. Leo omellini, fre hman from Chi· men are three Minneapoli h i g h Mall dahl, Frank tanton, Wil­ cago, who replaced Dellago at right sch 01 graduate, Ja k oung, cen­ liam Farrell, Earl Lar on, Ray King, guard, opened the scoring by block· ter; Wally alovich, cen ter or for- am Hunt, Cliff ommer, Harold ing a ebra ka punt near the Corn­ Van Every, William Bevan, Pete Guzy hu ker goal line. Th ball rolled and John (Pete) omers. aero and out of th end zOlle f r a Chicago Meeting The annual "M" club tag \ ill be safety and two point. Goph r tau h­ held on the ening of ovember 15 down wer made by K n B i r dod, The Minnesota Alumni club in th III rican Legion club rooms, fre hman from Chicago, Ch uck v ry of Chicago sponsored a Minne- 603 econd v nue OUth' Minneap­ of ntigo, Wi., Harry Elliott of ola- orthwestern f 0 0 t ball ali . Thi i the night before the Watertown, Minn., Bob andb rg o( luncheon on October 11 at Mar­ Minne ota-Iowa game in Memorial tadi urn. M mber are invited to visit Rice Lake, Wi ., and Mark Heffel­ shall Field's. George R. Bailey finger of Minneapoli. Minne ota' th e M room in the north tower of only point after touchdoWJ1 wa '22 hem, is president, and Eu­ Memorial tadium between halves on kicked by Vern Gagne. gene Lysen '18, is secretary of the afternoon of home games. Re­ Note: The fir t game wa een by the Chicago group. fre hm nt are serv d on the e a ca- 51,093 spectator ... The Goph r IOn. OCTOBER, 1946 37

Alumni Association Affairs

More Readers increa ing number from alumni. Thi vancement of learning and education· year the p ubli hed directory project al enrice made po ible by the fund . RI G the pa t year the Minne· will be re umed in pite of the difli· In recent year there have been D sota A [umTlus r ached it goal in cultie in getting paper and the high two accelerated trend in the program it driv for n, ub cription and in production co t. Fir t on the ched· of alumni financial aid to college eptember the campaign for the cur· ule will come the revi ion of the Ii ts and uni er-itie in the nited tate. rent y ar lI'a launched. The re pon e which were i_ ued jut before the war. Fir t. there ha been a hift in em· ha be n good thu far and thi year Th directorie contain a complete pha i from periodic, high pre ure the magazine hould be able to reo alphabetical Ii t of all graduate of campaign for capital gifts and en· port another marked increa in th particular college with addre e, dowments to continuou annual.giv. reader. The MinnesOla Alumnus i year of graduation and other infor· ing program in which the money one of th top five merican alumni mation. plu a econd complete Ii t· recei ed from alumni and other is magazine in point of circulation. Our ing by geographical location. and a currently expendable to meet the im· ultimate circulation goal i double the third by la e. Before publication. mediate need of the in titution. Two pre en t figure. th Minnesota Alumnus taH eek to rea on for thi change to the annual· In pite f a 100 per cent in rea veri£ the addre s of every indi idual giving program have been the low· in printing paper co t the annual through pecial check mailing . ered intere ~ t rate with a re ultant ub cription price remain at three decrea_e in annual income from en· dollar a) ear. Recent graduate and Gifts to University dowmenL and the de. ire to broaden ome other alumni who have ub· the giving ba e among alumni. MERIC I college alumni do,m cribed n a Ion rT term ba i receive The _e ond trend ha been the es· the magazine f r two dollar a 'ear. A through the 'ears have made tablishment of alumni fund under nother e eral thou and have be· vitally important contribution to the one name or another b , tate·sup. come life ub criber through the maintenan e and advancement of p rted college. and uni er ities and paym nt f the life ub cription and . higher education in thi country the addition of gift olicitation on an life membrr hip fee of fifty dollar. throurTh rTenerou gifts to their alma annual·gi ing ba i to the organized l.n the fa e of greatly increa ed pro· mater. The e gift are made to the alumni programs of the-e chools. duction os th marTazine ha con· in titution , but in the final anal i Within the pa t five year uch proj. the ben fit of the accumulated gi ing tinued to pay it 0 ' n way and to ects ha"e been initiated b everal pro ide additional fund in upport are enjoyed b ucceeding genera· mid·we. tern uni"er-itie . of th g neral alumni program a a tion of tudents and b oci ty at The urTge tion that Minne ota re ult f the incr a e in number of large through the r earch and the ad· alumni . hould con ider the po ihil· ub rib r. Th margin ha borne ity of initiatinrT a continuous gift might thin how er which make it ' olicitation program in behalf of the more important than ever before that Minnesotans Will Meet ni ersit)' ha been ad anced from all annual ub criber r turn th ir time to lime in the parTe of thi mag· payment prop rl . on receipt of tate· in Columbus azine. In 1939 on the occa_ion of the ments. fiftieth anniver ary of the fedical Minnesota alumni in Colum· chooL the alumni of that school e - bus Ohio, and others who visit tahli. hed the l\Iinne ota 1edical that cit to allend the Minne· Alumni Directories Foundation with the power to receive ota·Ohio tate game. are in· aift and endowments and to ecure vited to attend a Aiinnesota and hold patenL, tru t and prop· meeting all Fridaye enill"', Oc· erty. The Foundation income from tober 25, in Dar t Hall at the all urc i turned oyer to the 11i· 0111mbu YM at six o'clock. ,'er it) to he u ed in furthering the III charge of lhe arrangements proaram in medical teaching and reo for the occa ion i Donald Tim.­ , arch. ermall '1 t, who is executive ec· The idea of the development of a retary of the Franklin ollnt) fund'I" ceivinrT agency to cO\'er the oUllcil of lwrche ! ilh of· ntire alumni bod ' ha r ntly reo fices ill the rill A building, 40 eiyed IreJl impetu 'itll the re ult est Long (reet, Colllmbli . that the matter will receive the con. Reservations for the dinner ma ideralion of the hoard of directors be made with Air. Timerman. of th G neral lumni . 0ClaUon at Present from the amplI will a meting later uli month. The ap. b Illmni ecretar E. B. proval I u h a pr ject will b a ig. Pierce '04, and members of the nificant tep in th po. twar expan ion athletic statl. of th alumni program of eryic' in h half f th ni r.ity. 3 M INNESOT \ ALL' l\r" l S

l - Ili\fr~it\ staff in e 1 38 except for 1(39-40 when he r tumed LO Fran e tojoin theFren harm). For News of the Minnesota StaFF the pa,t iiI' y ar th office of Fren h Ol~ ular agent ha b en a ant. Dr. W ILLI M . RI D L D '34 E, b ok a a companion volume to his Fermaud held the appointm nt Iur a director of the niver ity'~ Bu­ book 011 "Weekly ewspaper Man­ bri I period following hi r turn from reau of eteran ffair , and' a lieu­ agement," publi hed in 1935. Barn­ Fran in 1940. On ept mb r -, h tenant colonel in the Corp o[ Engi­ hart al 0 i the author of" ewspaper be am nati nal pre ident of the neer Re rve, Army of the United ales PrO/nolion," publi h d in 1939. merican 0 iation of Teacher uf tate. ha been announced a com­ and cor , of arti Ie on the n wspa­ French. manding officer of a re er e battalion per profes ion. of combat engineer by the Officer in ince 1938 the number of niver­ Charge, Organized Re er , tate of sit\ of inne ota staff 111 mber. Ii ted Minne ota. Colonel Rind land erved in -"Who' Who in m rica" ha in­ on active duty a a i tant profes or ere a d from 164 to the pre nt rec­ of military cience and tactic with ord high of 237. The a rage age for the Re erve Officer Training Corp all the entrie from the niver-it), i The federal h alth ervice ha al- at Minne-ota from eptemb r. 1940 58.2 ) ear. The a eraO'e age of the located appro imatel 26,000 to th to June, 1944_ He then wa as ign d 35 taR member_ Ii ted r th fir l f niver. it\' to [inane the fir t \ ear to command an engineer combat bat­ time in th edition recent! publi, hecl of a stud) of fa tor in th degen'era­ talion and participated in operati ons is 51.4 veal' . in Germany with th inth rmy_ Lion of the healt and circulation y­ Commander H) Ian B. Lyn_ , Dr. William J. Lu ten, head of th t m. Dr. n el Key, dire tor of the executive offi er of the a al ROTC a tronom) department at the ni el­ laboratof) of ph)' iological hygiene, at Minne ota_ recei d a itation and ity, attend d the 75th anniver, an \\ ill head the group of ph)' iologi t ribbon thi month in recognition of program of th rgentine ob erva- ondll ting th tudy in an effort to hi er ice a operation officer of tory in Bu no ire la t month a a find th ke) Lo long it). ue t sp aker on the three-da), pr - the Mi ouri from Ma 15 to Ri hard ric on '17E:.._ re- gram. Hi air trip to k him a r08- 01. eptemb r 2, 1945. Th citation, i - ently b am head of the arm) re­ \eI') country in ~ ou th m rica e ued by Admiral John H. Tower" rve Hie r trainin cr program and ept Paraguay. commander-in-chi f of th Pacific p rofe .. or of militar tactic al the fleet. II a f rmall) pr ented b ' Cap­ Dr. J acqu - F rmaud, a" o iate -niv rjt\. H ",a araduated fro111 tain Walter . Holt, pro [e or of profes or of romance languaO'e , h3;­ West P i;lt in 1918 and s r ed in the naval ciene at Minne ota, in th I een named Fren h on ubr agent ollth\\ e t Pa ifi . H al 11 ' ened on pre enC'e of the arm and na y ROT I r the Tllin Citi. naliv of Lh ROTC staff at th l -niYer-ity units at th - . r it . France, Dr. Fermaud ha b n on th f rOIll 1929 Lo 1936_

Tn Ihis pi lUr , lakrn 8 1 a fr('sl,man mix er in 'orTman Union ca rl thi monlh, i, 8 group uf ~ons of innesola alumni. Fir I row. leil 10 right, Roger . LaNII1. ,on of Dr .. M. Lar,on '19Md; Rohert 'I . Engan. Ron of R . . Englll1 '20L: Erick S_ Dahll,eli!. ,,,n of E. ,. Dahlberg, fl llorney; and .Tack Ronning. "on of 1. . Ronning, lawyer . . econd row, Stu Brt R edy, who~(' mOI], er gl'lldu81 ed 8' \Iarian · 1a allum '11; Duvid Thnmp,on, 'on of IJarvey . IOll ganrd '3D; Roeleri I" Drew;, ,on of lIerbt'rt II. Drews '19L; and ormlln E. Pond, .on \If . A. Pond ' J8 g. Third row, Ben PariR, so n of 11'. and Mr'. Ben Pari, '14Ex ; John Wm. J enne, whose mother i;, Ih e form r lad ~ J nn" '19, and Joh n ']'ummer-, ~o n of W. 1lIlll1nwr- '07<\. 39 l JCT' I}I R. 1946

Comstock Hall, re ic/ence for women, which will be enlarged I hen building condilion permit Minnesota Women: On and Off the Campus Gene ie e Damkroger '42Ed, is the NIr. Jo ph . Grecco (Mildred 12 year. In Pitt burgh _he taught nel program con ultant of CoHman 1. Carlson '30 ) ha been appointed piano and organ l11U ic at Pennsyl­ Memol'ial nion. Mi s Damkroger organist and enior choir director of vania College for omen and en-ed er ed three rear a ecretar to the th Como Park Lutheran church in a an organi ~ t.director at t w dean of women at Carlelon College. ~ t. Paul. Mr . Grecco returned to the chur h ~. La t year he 'worked on her rna ter' Twin Ci lie ~ la t ear after being ac­ degree in p"),chol gy at the Univer· tive in Pitt burgh music circle for Lolu G. Peter on '+SEx. has reo ity of Minnesota. While in school a­ cei ed an appointm nt to do Bahai an undergTad uate, he wa aClive in pioneering in Maracaibo, enezuela the A sociation of Women' tuden t b th Bahai Int l'- rnerican c m· Tit e Minnesota Alumnae and i a member of the Pi B ta Phi. mittee. Jane Connolly '33Lib, ha been ap­ Club opened it activities for pointed archivist for St. Thomas Col­ the sea on OT! October 12 w~th a On AUDu ' l 26 'The Country of the lege in t. Paul. In her position she tea at the home of Mrs. James oung:' a no elll'ritten b Catherine Brown Lind a 45 ,of t. Paul, wa will .collect the records and anllal , L. Morrill. wife of the president brought out b r Reynold ·Hitchcock both prinled and photographed, of of the niuersit.y, al1005 Fifth lhe coll ge as well as the published publishinO' house. t pre, ent she i writing of student and facult ' treet _E., Minneapolis. In the at , ork on thr e short no eL Lo come member. receiving line wilh Mrs. Mor­ out in one volume. Dorothy Bennett 30A shortly ill rill were Miss Ceoelia elson , Mrs. Janet orthfield Carlsted publish a new book lo be aUed, ' presidenl of the clnb, alld the '43HEcEd, and Jean P. Walm ley Pi tured Encyclop dia for Children, past president . Miss Rose \1-SEd. are tea hing at ummit another in the Giant Golden Book Kotasek and Mr . E. C. Bremer chool. t. Paul. serie. Miss B nnett, who i with imOll and huster in New York, has were co-chairm ell oj the event. Sally Davidson ·31·32Gr of ~l. edited the ntire Golden Book eri 3. Paul. ha be n ited b r the War De· 40 MINNESOTA ALUMNUS

On the ociated Wom en tudents entertainment co mmittee whi h developed the " li ce in Gopherland" th eme lor the t a Daughler of Minne ota alumni who attended the Ire hman given for fre bman girl were, left to right, Jeanne I. Onge of tea given by A sociated Wom en tudents. Front 'row, left to I. Paul, ue Hall of SI. Louis Park, and Tess McElwee of Minn · right, Joan Cooper, daughter of E. J. Cooper '27MA, of Robbins· apolis. dale; Martha Merrill- Mr. W. W. Merrill '23Ex, and Mrs. Merrill (Catherine Tifft '22Ed) of Glencoe; Wanda McIntire-Dr. H. E. Mary Ellen Locken- Dr. O. E. Lo cken '20Md, of Minneapoli ; McIntyr '210, of Hutchinson, and Jea n McDonald-Mr. and Mr . Mary McRoberts-Mr. John McRob rt (France Greenwalt (Marion Jones '21A) Colin 1. McDonald '24Ex, of Annandale. '16Pharm) of I. Paul, and Gretchen Hosterman- Dr. Frank P. Second row, Mary Jane Miesen- A. R. Mie en '17 Ag, of St. Paul ; Ho terman '120, of Robbinsdal e. partment for her service during the 1943, and erved in England France. Th yare: Charlotte Fi cher '46Ed, war a editor of the GI Round Table Belgium and Germany with inva ion daughter of Profe or Earl Fi cher pamphlet. These pamphlet were troop. Mis hepherd, who formerly '19Chem; 40Ph.D., of the pharmac distributed to ervicemen throughout taught chool in Dearborn, Michigan. departm nt, and Mr . Fi cher (Merr the world for use in di cu sion returned Lo thi countr la t January. Mueller '21Ex); hirley Huntl group. Miss Davidson erved on Four recent gradual of the col­ '4GEd; Ev n Jone '46Ed, and Vir­ the Historical Service Board in Wa h· lege of education at the University ginia Pickhardt '46Ed, all of Minn in gton , D. C. are teaching in Ontario, California. apoli . Jane McCarthy '29Ed, production manager of the niver ity Pre , wa honored in the eptember i ue of Glamour maaazine which carried a tory on h r \ ork entitl d, "Women in Publi hing." It coml iimented her as production manager and de igner. La t May France nid r Wil- loughby '32Ed, and her infant on joined Mr. Willoughby on the i land of Cebu in the Philippine \ her he erving a a mining engin 1"­ Flora J. Macdonald '18 ; '39M . recently" as el cted vice pre iden t of the ational Leagu of Teachers' A - ociati n. he al 0 \ ill dit the of­ ficial bulletin of the organization. Mi Macdonald al 0 i pr ident of th e League of CIa room T a her of Wi con in. he teach hi tory in the A hland, Wi con in , high chool. Lt. Barbara Zoubek '44 ; '44PH , of t. Paul, ha arrived h ome n leI" minal I ave after 18 month in the army nur e corp . he p nt 14 month in K rea. Loui e B. heph rd '41Ed, of l. Paul, ha bcen award d the Bronze Pr sent to -el'\e in a Big isler at the fr eshman t a given during " . feN Minne ota" week by "~ s ucialed Women tud nt were the't! mrmbl' rs of the Ml!:uni,'\' tar for her work a a R d Cro s a - lion left to right, Dorolhy hoen, 1\1inn up li,; err ' toncr, pr sid nt of WS. i tant in the European [h ea t r. he l. Paul; Janel handl r, Ex r l ior; Deney linnenpoli s; Rhoda Hersh. \Iinlw, joined the R d Cro in Dec mb r. apoli . and Gretchen Srr('ngrr, Ro c h e~ t e r . OCTOBER, 1946 41

A charter member of the a ocia· tion, Morri i one of three pecialisu: in biological photography who were Hospital Administrator Course Opened elected a fellow thi year in the fir t awarding of fellow hip ever given in EW cour in ho pital admin­ value a a normal part of niver ity thi field. Morri ha been on th A i tration ha been e tabli hed activitie , it is expected to become a niver ity taf! a a medical photog· in Minne ota chool of Public permanent pha e of the niver ity' rapher for 40 year and i a pioneer Health under a grant from the Kel­ curriculum. in the making of color photo of logg Foundation of Battle Cr ek_ pecific cour e to be included in micro copic plate, known a photo­ Mich. In announcing the new our e, the program will be in four general micrograph. He made the fir t color Dr. Gaylord W. nder on, director of field: Ho pital organization and ad­ photo of polio pathological Ie ions. th chool of Public Health, declared mini tration public health. bu in used for a lecture in 1910 by the late it wa a tep toward meeting the great admini tration and ocial, ork. Dr. H. E. Robert on of Roche tel'. demand for trained ho pital admini . Work of the medical photo labora­ trators. Honored tory i chiefly devoted to the record­ The cour e, which will begin with ing of re earch, teachina aid, for the the fall quarter, will be open only to Election of Henry W. Morri, medical ciences and photo for the tudent holding at least a bachelor's head of the medical photoaraphic lab· publication of re earch results. The degree and will be limited at the oratory at Minne ota a a fellow of ubject matter i mainly microscopic out et to an enrollment of 20. Dr. the Biological Photographic a socia· pecimen and clinical patients, the Ander on anticipates that mo t of the tion wa announced in ugu t by latter frequently taken in "before and students enrolling will be from two J. McComb of Pittsburgh, pre ident after' photo to how re ults of treat· general group : physician desiring of the a ociation. ment. to enter the field of ho pital admini . tration and graduate of the choolof Bu ine Admini tration. Pro pective ho pital admini trator will be required to complete two full Doctors Return to Civilian Practice academic year of tudy including one year of actual course work and Phy ician back in civilian practice has re umed practice as an eye pe· one year of work on an intern hip following military ervice: ciali t in the Ph icial1 and urgeon ba i in orne ho pita!. Succce sful Dr. chu ler nder on '41Md. Building, inneapoli. He entered completion of the cour e wiU lead to ha returned to practi in the Medi· the Army air force in 1942 and a ma ter degree. cal rt Building, Minneapoli. He erved at Oak Ridge. "The demand for competent and entered th rm in ugu t 1942, Dr. Harold E. Miller ·37Md. ha experien ed ho pital admini trator and , p nt 10 month in England. resumed practice of internal medi· far e c ed th available uppl ," Dr. Dr. Gorge Bergh '33Md· cine in the Medical rts Building, nder on point d out, "nor i there '40Ph.D., IIho er ed three year in MinneapolL. He entered the Army in a an likelihood that the upply' ill orth fri a and Ital). i p;acticin eptember, 19-1.2. and erved at Fitz· be adequate for many year, e p ci­ in th M dical rt Building, linne­ -immon Ho pita!. all in vie' of th increa ina demand ap lis. Dr. Edward G. OL n ·29Md. ha cca ioned by f deral proaram for Dr. B rnard A. Cohen '35Md, i ' returned to hi- practi e of urology in ho pital con truction. practicin a at 3 W. 27th tr et. fin­ the M dical rt Buildina. Minne­ neapoli.. He ent red th lav)' in apoli . He ent red the rm - in 1943 "The re ult ha be n " continued June, 1944, and p nt on )ear in th and , en ed at Oak Ridge. Dr. nder on, 'that many adminis­ Pa ifi th ater. Dr. Karl . Pleis-ner '-1.1 Id. is trator ha come to th ir dutie with Dr. amu 1 . Dwor k · '24 Id. pra ticing at 365~ Joppa venue, t. inadequate background which means who r d in na al ho pital in Phil· Loui Park. He nt red the inevitable inefficien y and 10 of ad lphia, Norfolk and Great Lakes. is ~ eptember, 1942. public money. The larger in titutions pra ti ing in Minneapoli . Dr. Er n E. Pumala \ \.ll\ld. i­ ha e relied on admini trator who Dr. lb rt T. Ha ' practicing at -32 th venue outh. have I arned on an apprenti ba i" pra ti ina in th Medical rt- Build· Iinneapolis. H entered th rm~ but th number 0 trained i gro- ly ing, Minneapolis. H enter d t h in Februdl"Y, 19-1.2. and , rved two below the need for th number of po­ l"m ' in July. 1 43, and , en'ed at 'ear in Eur p . , ition availabl. Oak Ridge. Dr. Ri hard E. R il '3 --l.2Gr, i The K e II 0 g g Foundation has Dr. B urn J rom '3 Md, ha I'C' pra ti ing in the M dieal Art Build­ awarded the nivedty an initial um d practice in the Medical rl inO", Minn ap Ii .. aft l' 36 month aran o{ 50 000 for the fir t ' ar of BuildinO', Minneapoli" H ntered ervi e in th Pa i£i ar a. the our e. T rm of the aar em 11t th I'm ' in [ ovember, 1 ..W. and Dr. Fred ri F. ~ ipp rmall . 8l\ld. b tween the foundation and th er d 14 month - in Europe. has r sumed practi e as an ) e p. v r ity all for additional grant f Dr. John P. KII , '42Id, IIho iali t in the Medical rL Building. 20 000 for each of the two following erv d in the rm) in Brazil and Minn apolis. H erved in th I u· ear. t the nd of th first th ree Briti h Guiana i pra ti iug at 3 01 lians and at old· hamberlain Field year, if the cour e in ho pital ad- icoll t v nue. 1inn ap lis. na al air tati n wa _ nior medical l11ini tration ha d m n trat d its Dr. rnon L. Lindb rg ·37Md. offic r. 42

Dental School Receives Postgraduate Study Grant

R E E lT d elopment in d ntal Dr. Thoma D. Gert '42D pra · r earch and practice will b ticing at 4146 Fremont nue taught in a program of hort co ur es orth, Minn apoli , aft r 45 month" to b introduced by the hool of in the army air forces. Denti try thi fall. Th cour e_ will Dr. Raymond F. D. John on '27D, b de igned for the continuing edu· ha r umed practice in Minneapoli cati n of di harged dental offi cer of after 33 month in the rmy. He the army and navy and general dental erved mo t recentl at Randolph practition r. Dr. William H . Cra,, · Field, Ma ., a a maj or. ford '23D, dean of the chool of Den· Dr. rthur J. Loring ·37D. i prac· ti try. announced in ugu t th at the ticin g at 1025 Broadway, Minneapo· finan ing of the program of p cial Ii , followin g four year in the a ) . hort cour e ha been made po ible Lt. Comdr. Loring served 15 month~ through a grant of 95,975 from the a dental offi cer on th Monti· W. K. Kelloug Foundati on of Battle cell o. Cre k, Mich. Dr. J eph O. MOlla 28D. i a The program will be fin anc d for m !TIber of th tafT of the v t ran the fir t three· year period by th admini tration ho pital in Minneapo. Kellogg Foundation. he k for D EAi\' WILLIA:\[ H. \WFORD Ii. Maj or Mona wa in the Army 46, 75 for the operation of the po t· 4.6 month. Dr. Irving W. el n ·-l4D. \ hu graduate continuation tudy plan for and equipped by th ni er ity. Each it initial year ha been received by erved 32 month a a li eutenant of the two n w clinic for u e in the (j .g.) at a naval air tation at ttu. the niver ity. Under the term of "refre her" program will hav eight la ka. i pra ti ing at 3738 hicauo the grant, the Kellogg Foundation or ten dental chair . will allot 27,000 for the ear 1947· v nue, Minn apoli . 48 and 22,000 for the year 1948·49. Ten new linical in tru tor \ ill be Dr. Ronald J. eth I' '43D. ha added to the tafT of th chool of re umed practi in Minneapoli af· Refresher Courses Denti tr to a i t in teaching th lat· t r 30 month at amp Car ~ 11 , I· e t development in denti tr to tho e orado. aid Dr. Crawford : "Thi n w pro· who enroll in the continuation pro· Dr. Fr d ri k W. 1 oble '43D. \\ho gram will pro ide an opportunit f r gram. The e in tructor will be prac· er ed 34 month ,ith the Ia . i ~ a d nti t to return to the niver ily ti cing denti t from t. Paul and Min· practicing at Central and Fourth to I am ab ut the new development neapoli who willt ach on a part time enu . E., Minneapoli. H whi h ha taken place in impro d ba i . erv d on the Mt. 01 mpu in procedure afTecting th practi ce f mong th many r c nt de elop· the hine e war th ater and during denti try ince he uraduated or took ment in denti t) which will be the Japane occupation. hi la t po t·graduat cour e. The taught und r the n \ plan. a cord· Dr. Raymond Rydlund '30D, has program i particularly n ded right in g to Dr. Crawford . \I ill b : 1. The resumed pra ti in Minn apoli af· no" b cau e there i an urg nl d . direct appli ation of flu orine to teeth ter 37 month in the fin a a mand among di charg d dental ffi · a a deca pre nti ve; 2. Prevention cer for ontinuation cour , but" of dental de a thr ugh ontrol of e p t to c nlinue the program a a bacteria in the mouth by reg ulation perman nt policy of the dental of the carboh drat ( ugar) intak . h oI. " Cour in the new program will be de igned to meet the need and d . Back from Service mand of the denti t , particular! at Denti t r entl) back into ci ilian fir t tho e r turning from militar pra tice fo ll owin u mi litar _ r ic : ervice. In truction in ten divi ion of dental ience wi ll be offered each Dr. Ch tel' nd r n '43D, i quarter. our e wi ll run for two practicing in Minn apoli after 32 we ks, and cia will b limited to month army service. a captain h appro imately 15 practi ing denti t . erved from ormand to the Rhin pecial empha i will be pia ed on \ ith th Third army and , ith the v nth army on 0 upati nal dut in clo ely. upervi ed clini al work. Germany. Of the initial grant of 4,6,975, an alIo ation of 14,975 ha been made Dr. Mil s R. Bard '4,2D, i practic' for tabli hing and equipping an ing in the M dieal 1'l Building, adult clinic adjacent to the general Minneapoli , after 43 month in th clinic in the dental b uilding. sep· rmy as a captain. He rved in arat clinic for children will be et up France and Germany. 43 UCTOBER, 1946

of Alpha Particles and ELectrons," pub!Lhed fir t in 1921. with a econd edition in 1928. and 130 publi hed Technology Dean to Retire in 1947 cientlfic article in the field of chem­ istry. 1925. a a . ociate director of the de· R. M EL . 11 D, d an of Dean Lind ay that he has no D Minn ota' In titute of Tech· partment' nitrogen research labora· tory. He held thi po ition until plan be) ond hi retirement date noloo- · inc 1935 and a member of other than the pur uit of hi fa"orite the . tafT ince 1926, will retire at the called to the niver ity of Minne ota in 1926. hobby, trout fi rung, in th _tream end of the coming chool year it wa along the north hore of Lake u· announced thi month by Pre ident He wa a\~arded the 'ichol medal perior and in . tream and lake- in J. L. Morrill. D an Lind, known to of the N w York ection of the mer· Wyomino-, and orne 'indifferent" hi collegau and tudent alike a ican Ch mi al oci ty it 1925. In golf. "Lind ," will rea h the retirement 1930, h wa elected to the Jational ao-e of 68 on June IS, 1947, and hi cademy of cience. and, in 1940, Lono- an exponent of a broad. lib· r tirem nt become effective on will to th merican Philo ophical ~ o· eral education for tudents -pe ial· Jul 1. 1947. H came to the ni· ci ly. He wa named pre ident of izing in technical field and spon. or ver it) in 1926 a director of the of the ne, five.year COUI" _e for en­ the ill rican Ele trochemical iet) h 01 of h mi try and profe or of in 1927. and pre ident of the meri· aineering tudent at the lJniYer-ity, ch mi-try and \ hen the In titute of call hemical ociety in 1940. t Dean Lind de cribed the lenothened Technology, "hi h include the Col· pre. nt, the dean i 'director of Di . our e a. a "II i e polic)"." leg of Engine ring and rchitecture, trict 6 of the merican Chemica! th chool f hemi try and the .. hould there eyer come a period ociet). Thi di tricl include all ter­ when all of our en!illleering student ch I of line. wa formed in 1935, ritory we t of the Mi i •• ippi river in· h becam iL fir t dean. cannot obtain job in technical cluding Hawaii. He ha . en·ed a field .. , he commented. "the\ at lea_t Born in McMinnville. Tenn ee. editor of the "Ioumal (If Ph ical "ill ha\ e had a sound o-eneral edu­ J un IS, 1879, Dean Lind grew up Chemistr " ~ in e 1932. cation and _hould be ahle to enter and r i\ ed hi early education in other field quite readil)'-' hi native . tate. He earned a bach· From 1926 to 1931, Dean Lind. as· elor of arts d gree from Wa hington ociated "ith Dr. George Glockl r, He pointed out that the ~ oeiety and e uni\ r it · in irginia in no, head the chemi try departm nt for Promoti n of Eno-in erino- Edu­ 139 . and a bach lor of cienc de· of the niver ity of 10\ a and under cation, through a committe of which gre in 1902, from the Ma sa hu tl a grant from the merican Petrolewll he i a member, predict d in June Institute ('If T chn logy. In 190~, the in titute directed re earch on the ef­ that technological . tudent- gradu. nher it of Leipzi CY , Germany, con· fect of electrical di charge on the ating in 19-2. "ill be the fir-t of f rred upon him the degree of do tor hydrocarbon ga e . p . tll·ar en!rineering graduates ,ho of philo oph. I-Ie arri d out reo ma) haye difficulty in finding em· arch proj t in the laboratory of He i the author, , ith Dr. Glockler. ployment in te hnical field. The Mme. urie in Pari and the In ti· of 'Electrochemisty of Gases and prediction i. ba. ed n the as. ump­ tut of R(idiul11 Re. earch during a Other Dielectrics . • publi. hed in 1939. tion of a normal de\'elopment of in­ abbatical lea\e in 1910·1l. H also II rote "The lzemical Effect dustr~. Dean Lind e -plained. D an Lind b (Tall hi teaching ca· re r at lh ni\ er. il) of Michigan in 1905 a an instru tor and later a- an a istanl profess r of phy ical hem­ Engineering Group to Meet on Campus i try. In 1913 he left Michigan to j in Ih taf[ f Ih nited tat Bu· II graduates and fonner . ludents of the yariou diyisi ns of the f Min al Den er, Colorado, In tilut of T hno]oay are im it d to alt nd the annual 111 tin a of led hi. atlention to the th alumni as ociation of th In. titute in oHman l]nion n ednes· Ira tion of radium from ore min d da e\ ning, 0 \ mber 13. Th r will be a r ception at :' 0 lIith in lorado' m untains. Later, h th dinner . hedu! d for sey n 0 'clock in the junior ballroom on th a. igned to th Bur au of Min "a. third n or of the nion. ~I el11ber _ of the fa ulty of the Institut of stalion al old n. olorado, and Te hnoloo-y aLo hay b en il1\-it d. "hen th . talion was moved t Reno. levada, in 1 20, he went to R no a Th [eatur of the program \\ ill be an address b . President J. L. . tation uperintcnd nl. Tran ferred Iorrill. TIle officer of the alumni ass iati n of th lnstitut of 10 Wa hington, D. ., in 1923 h b . Te hnolog . are Harl") E. G rri h '05. pr sident, l\Iinneapolis: eoro-e am hief ch mi t of th Bur au o[ ,1. _ hepard '09, vi e pI' sid nt, t. Paul: Donald H no-, se retar). Min . and \\ a in harg of all h lium work don b) Ih bureau in luding trca ur .r, Iinneapoli, and Theodore . B n11 tt '31. and J mes ,\ . the extra lion of helium for u b · olvin '14, committe cha.irmen, lilln ap li.. Ir. errish i_ in th av)'. harge of arrangcmenL for th dinn r. Dinn r re- r"ation ma) be Th of mad through Ml. erri.h'. ffi ,llll i oIlet h nue. 'IinnE-apolis. l\ gri ult ure • rVI S In 44 M 1 NNE~OTA ALUMNUS

On Autumn aturday afternoons . . . .. the Librar), gets a rest

nlillU IIIIIIII IIIIIII IIII II IIIIIIIII III II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIII III II11I!IIIilll lllllll ll llllil1II 1I 1I1I1II:1I 11111111 11 11111111111111111 "IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUII III III11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I 1I 1I1I1I1I1I1I1I111I1I1I1II1II11I11I 1II1I11I1I 1I 1II1Il1I11I1I1I1II1I1II1I1II1I1I 1I 1II1I1I1I1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1 News of Minnesota Alumni by Classes 11111111111 111 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111101111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII III IIII IIII IIIIIIIHII IIIIIIIIIIIIIII II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIII111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11 111111111111111111 11 11111111111111111111111111111111111I111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111UIIIIIIIIIIIIII

Mary H. Folwell '86Ex; '89-90, last ciety and a fellow of the ew York the mining section of the Reconstruc­ of the children of the University's first Academy of Medicine. tion Finance orp., died la t July at president, Dr. William Watts Folwell, - 1900- his home in Washington, D. . Short­ died at Rochester, Minnesota, on Sep­ Louis C. Luhr 'OOA, died August 8 ly after graduation from the University tember 3, after a long illness. She was at his home in Orange, California. he joined the engineering staff of Calu­ 81 years old. Miss Folwell came to - 1901- met and Arizona Mining Co. rising to Minnesota from New York state at the Dr. James Trent Christison 'OIMd, the posi tion of uperintendent of mines, age of five. She was a member of of St. Paul, died September 14 at his a post he held until 1931. In that year Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, Daugh­ summer home in Grand Rapids, Min­ he went to Washington and in 1934 ters of the American Colonists and of nesota. He was active in health edu­ joined the RF , mining section and had Holy Trinity, oldest Episcopal church cation and was recognized as an been chief of the section since 1942. in Minneapolis. Miss Folwell helped authority on children's health problems. -1904- He was the leader in St. Paul to ob­ arrange her father's extensive collection William B. Stout '04Ex, noted en­ tain adequate pure milk measures and of books and papers for use of the gineer and inventor, has devised a plan Minnesota Historical society library. pasteurization regulations some 30 for mass production housing. To facili­ -1892- years ago. About ten y ars ago he re­ tate the project, tout Houses, Inc., Charles A. Dalby '92Ex, veteran Min­ tired as an associate professor of pedi­ has been organized in Detroit. All ac­ atrics at the University. In addition to neapolis attorney, died recently. He cepted housing constru tion has been his work at the University he main­ practiced law in Minneapolis for more shelved and his house is built from than 55 years and only recently re­ tained a private practice until 1940. He the top down and inside out. tired because of ill health. was past president of the Minnesota -1897- Medical Association, a member of the - 1908- Dr_ Rose Anne Bebb '97Md, is a Red ross of Constantine and Minne­ Service were held in Minneapolis practicing physician and psychiatrist sota delegate to the Americ. n Medical September 14 for Dr. Carl M. Roan to the New York City Department of Association. He is survived by his wife, '08Md, who died of a heart atta k. He Hospitals. She is a member of the Margaret G. Edgerton Christison '07Ex, was a graduate of Augsburg oll ege American Medical Association, New one son and one daughter. as well a the University of Minnesota York state and county medical soci­ - 1903- and also studied at Tul:!ne University eties, the New York neurological so- Donald M. Rait '03Mines, chief of and the University of openhagen. H e OCTOBER, J 946 45 was a former member of the welfare national Society of Orthopedic Sur­ Dr. Ernest S. Mariette '13Md, medical board and the city charter commission gery 10 Brussels as United States dele­ director and superintendent of Glen in Minneapolis and once was candidate gate. Lake sanatorium, addressed the 48th for mayor. He was active in civic and -1912- annual convention of the American fraternal affairs and was a member of Dr. Benjamin J. Shalett '12Ex for­ Hospital Association in Philadelphia many professional societies. He had merly of Minneapolis, died recently in last month. written several books in orwegian ew York. He had been practicing in A book of literary criticism, entitled, and English on medical subjects. Sur­ ew York for 16 years. "iving are his wife, Marie; two daugh­ "On Second Thought," by James Gray ters, Mrs. Thomas Marron and Grace -1914- '20A, will come out October 19. The '38GC; and three sons, Chet R. '31Ex; Dr. Erwin T. Dahlberg '14A, who book will present Mr. Gray's dramatic '38-40, assistant to the director of ath­ is president of the orthern Baptist and literary reviews over a two-decade letics at the University, Dr. Morton convention, was in the Twin Cities last period and show how he has changed '43Md, and Vincent . '43Ex. month to speak at a meeting of Min­ his mind about some things. He for­ -1909- nesota Baptists. Dr. Dahlberg is a merly was drama and literary critic Dr. Henry Meyerding '09Md; '18MS member of the American Committee with the Dispatch-Pioneer Press of St. orthopedic surgeon at the Mayo Clinic of the World Council of Churches and Paul. During the past summer he was is in Europe where he will lecture at several other religious and international a consultant with Warner Bros. in the universities of Leiden and Amster­ organizations. Hollywood and now is with the Chi­ dam in Holland and in colleges in Bel­ -1920- cago Daily News. He also will teach gium, France and England. He also Ray M. Amberg '20Pharm, superin­ a course, Writing for Publication, at will attend a meeting of the Inter- tendent of University Hospitals, and the University of Chicago.

Two Presidents Will Greet Alumni at Homecoming Dinner

campu where tudent en· ota and Pre ident Fred L. Hovde phone number i Main 8177, Ex­ O rollment records have been '29, of Purdue, and by member of ten ion 6135. the coaching taff of the two broken to the point , here state· The tudent Homecoming pro­ chool. Musical number and ment of record number are com­ gram will tart on ovember 7 monplace, the annual Homecom­ other interesting program feature \ ith the election of a Homecom­ 0 are being arranged by the dinner ing program on ember 8 and ing queen. On Frida. overnber 9 may very well attract a peak committee. Pre ident Morrill will 8 at 3 :30 p.m. there, ill be a mock number of alumni from outside al 0 peak at the meeting of the football game bet\ een fraternity the Twin Citie. The number of tate-wide alumni advi ory com­ and orority member on the Farm alumni vi itor may be limited mitte in Coffman nion at noon campu and at 7 :30 the tudent omewhat by two factor : the in­ on 0 ember 8. var Ity how will be taged in ability to get football tickets b lumni dinner ti ket will be orthrop auditorium under the di­ tho e who decide at the la t mo­ 1.50 per per on and re_er ation ment to attend the Home oming rection of Dr. Robert Win low of ma be made through th lumni the mu ic department. Fraternity game-and the difficulty in getting office in Coffman nion. The tele- hotel re ervation in the T\ in and orority hou decoration Citie on that particular weekend. will be judO'ed that eveninO' and a pep rally will be held at :00. Highlight of the - program on t 10:00 a.m., aturda '. TO_ Friday, 0 emb r 8 for alumni vember 9 ther will be a Home­ will be the annual lumni Home­ cominO' parad \ hich this 'ear coming dinn r in th main ball­ \ ill travel a rout thr ugh do\m­ room of offman nion at i · town Iinneapoli. The ~ football o'clock. Meeting with Minne ota alumni on that occa, ion will b , gam b twe n i\Iinn ~ ota and Pur­ Purdu graduat living in Min­ due' ill tart at 2 :00 p.m. Alunmi ne ota and th plan for the pro­ are in it d to att nd a Homecom­ gram are being made by a joint ina dance in JIman nion at committ e of Minne ota and Pur­ 9: 0 p.m., n aturday at which due alumni with the a i-tance of Elliot La\\r nc and hL balld will Alumni ecretar , E. B. Pierc . play. Th ,nt i b inO' pon or d The toa tma ter \rill bRay J. by the nion board of 0'0 ernors and aluollli are in it d to make Quinli an of I. loud, a m m­ ber £ the Board of R gents. U, ir reser ation throuah the off­ man ni n oLIi e or through the Th r will bah rt talk b , lumni office. Th pri i 2.40 Pre id nt J. L. forrill f Minn . FHED L. H DE '2 a oup\ for th dance. 46 MIN E OT." L MNU

-1922- -1924- ate out of the Portland, regon, ffiet: Dr. Henry E. Peterson 'nD, died Warren E. Carlson '24EE, account­ of Price dministration. inee return­ September in Minneapolis. He was ant in the business office at the Uni­ ing to the coast, he has erved a a a member of Xi Psi Chi, Minneapolis versity, died eptember . He is sur­ personnel officer for the Kai er hip­ District Dental Society, American Den­ vived by his wife and three children. building interest, as a field representa­ tal s ociation and the Calhoun Beach -1929- tive fo r the Washington tate planning Club. He is survived by his wife, four Grover H. Helmer '29E , died Sep­ council, and as a manager for the sisters and four brothers, lfred; Dr. tember 7 at his home in t. Louis Park. United Seaman's Service in Portland. Nordahl P. 29Md; Dr. Oliver H. t the time of his death he was head Previous to this he was an investigator, '16 Jd ; and Dr. Peter E. '22 [d. of the Electronic Department at Mun­ field representative and administrator -1923- singwear, Minneapolis. He i survived in the field of public welfare in Illinois, Dr. Ernest O. Lawrence '23MA, an by hi wife and two sons. Iowa and Minne ota. Mr. and Irs. a ociate of Professor Einstein, is recog­ George C. Oldham '29Ex, has ac­ Oldham will continue to li\e in Ridge­ nized as one of the five top men in the cepted a civil service field position with field, Washington. development of the atom bomb. the federal government and \ ill oper- L. L. Schroeder '29L, Minnesota commissioner of aeronautics, was elect­ ed president of the ational ssocia­ tion of State Aviation Officials at a recent session in Butte, Montana. He Started a Happy Little Custom Norman B. Terwilliger '29BAd, for­ FROM 1924, the ear in which Memorial stadium " 'a opened merly examiner in the Minnesota state until the pre ent football ea on_ coffee and doughnut \ ere securities division, has been appointed erved between halve to th new paper and radio men in the pre . executive secretary of the Minneapo­ box with the complimen t of the tudent nion. The proj ct wa lis Teachers' Retirement Fund as OCla­ arried on from year to ear by the nion official without fanfare tion. Last January he was discharged r publicity and it is doubtful that mam of the recipient kne\ the from the rmy with the rank of cap­ . ource of the welc01l1 refre hment. Thi year in a re huffling of tain following 41 months of service as lh arrangement in the pr box and radio booth the iob of statistical control officer with the Fifth air force . di pen inO' the between hal e refr hment ha been turn dover -1930- to er ice Enterpri ,the niver ity agency \ hich operat dining Dr. and Mrs. Woodbridge OllStant room _ dormitorie and ther pecial ervice on th e campu . (Elizabeth B. Bass '30A) have moved • • • (rom Durham, orth arolina to Hart­ The press box projeci I!'aS iniliated in 1924 b) ilfinton M. Anderson '20Ch, fo rd , onn., where Dr. Constant will who is now vice president 0/ the Aluminum Company 0/ America, and who at be head of the physics department at that time was manager 0/ the ilIinnesota Union. The athieli department at that Trinity College. time was not interested in th e idea to the extent 0/ issuing passes to the mell who were to do the servillg. There/ore, Anderson resorted to a bold course 0/ John A. Grill '30Ex, i teaching at action to get the coffee and doughnuts and two 0/ his Union workers into the the Minneapolis chool of Busine s. t(f(/ium and the press b01:. A former FBI special agent Loane • • • J. Randall '30L, has been named chie( He ribbled a note which went omething like thi : 'Plea e of the Minneapolis ompliance En­ admit the e two men who will erve coffee and doughnut in the forcement division of the War ssets pre box during the game, ign d, M. M. Ander on." Baring a dmini tration. He will be responsible . upply of refre hment prepared at the nion, Bob Chri tin. who i for investigating irregularities in sur­ now supervi or of th billiard room and oth I' reel' ational fa ilitie plus property dispo als in the Twin in oHman nion, pre ented lhi unorthodox pa s at Ih tadium itie ' area. In 1938 he was co-cap­

Anglo-Dutch Plantation of Java. His George A. Wilkens '37 AgEd; '4 1 1 , -1939- home is in yd ney, Au tralia. ha been named director of the newly­ Dr. David W. Thompson '39 ; -1934- formed agricultural department of the '41 M has been appointed an assist­ Maxwell Leo Bohanon '34A, fo rmer Minneapoli ivic and Commerce As­ ant in the department of speech at the social se rvices director fo r the Minne­ sociation. He served as agricultural University. economist on the staff of the Minne­ apoli s public relief department, has Albert D. Robson '39B, ha been as­ apolis Federal Reserve Bank prior to been named executive secretary of the signed to the Minneapolis office of fer­ the war and again on his return. From maha Urban League. Jn 1943 he re­ rill, Lynch, Pierce Fenner and Beane 1943 to 1945 he served as an officer igned the relief department post to as an account executive. He formerl in the la\'y. go to Germany fo r UNRR . was employed by Federated Hardware -1938- Dr. Raymond D. Davis '34Md, for­ Mutuals of Atlanta, Ga., until enlist­ Paul Wayne Riedesel '3 -39 r, of merly of Clearbrook, Minnesota, ha ment in the Navy in 1942. begun practice in Waseca. H e is as­ \Vayza ta, died last month. He was a sociated with Dr. B. J. Gallagher anitary engineer with the Minnesota ew chairman of the finne ota Re- '16Md, in the practice of medicine and department of health since 193 . publican tate Central Committee, surgery. Karl J. Granquist '34Ex, is in the life insurance business in Walla Walla, Wa hlOgton. During the war he served Do You Remember When? in the infantry. Lt. Col. Jerome J. Hilliker '340, has The following ilem from campu nett of ears pa I were taken been appointed chief of the veterans from the file of the 1innesota Alumni Weekly, which became the admInistration regional dental clinic Minnesota A lumnLL ill 1943. The Minne ota lllmni Weekly tea in Wa hington. D. first publi !zed in eptember, 1901. . - 1935- Octob r 1901: The annual can ru h bet\\ en the freshmen and Dr. Harold D . Harlowe '35 1d has the ophomor _ wa called an even conte-t .. , Under the auspices Joined the Garberson linic of Mile of the -niversil ' Dramatic club. Mr. Hem - outhwick gaye an City. lontana as eye, ear, nose, and interpretati\e recilal of Richard III. The introduction b . Profe __ or throat spectalist. Richard Burlon. lengthened to kill time. made neces_ary by the Dr. John E. Skogland '35 {d, is _udden lumina off of the liO'ht in th chapel. wa full of happy hit_ practlcJl1g medicine in Hou ton, Texa , and kepl lh audienc in good hUOlor until the liO'hl- were turned and peci.lizing in eurology. His on aO'ain ... Dr. L. J. ooke organized a _trong man' cIa- .,' It offic addre S IS 710 l\ledical rts Build­ wa propo ed that a campu~ m morial be erect d in honor of the 200 Ing. Dr. and 1\[r . kogland (Ruth former tudent who en'ed in the war \1 ith pain ... \r inne~()ta Broderick '34 T), and their two chil­ defeat d Nebra_ ka. 19 lo O. in f tball. dren, Beth and Jack, 11\ e at 2203 Ad­ • • • dison Road, Houston. October. 19] I: A nell chapel schedule R'a anluJulHed n'ith the prUJams to be held on V ondalS, Tr ednesdlI\ and Frida, from 12 to12::;0 p.m . ... The - 1936- .

:-vhich directs the work of the party ID the state, is Bernhard W. LeVander Leaders in Higher Education '39L, of St. Paul. He was unanimous­ ly elected at a meeting of the commit­ tee in Minneapolis at the close of the COLONEL MARTIN TOLLEF- Melby '26MA; '2 8Ph.D., who resigned party's state convention. Mr. LeVander SON '21L; '26Ph.D. has returned from the Montana presidency a year erved in the avy during the war from military service to his position as ago to become dean of the New York and took part in nine landing opera­ dean of the law school of Drake Uni­ University School of Education. Be­ fore going to Montana, Dr. Melby had ~ions in the Pacific with an amphib­ versity in I)es Moines. He entered been dean of the School of Education IOUS force. He formerly was director service in 1941 as a captain, was pro­ at Northwestern University. of social welfare for the state. moted to major and to lieutenant -1940- colonel in 1942, and to colonel in 1943. A man who holds five degrees from Clement (Tim) Ramsland '40Ph.D., In 1941 he wa named chief of the legal Minnesota, Dr. Raymond B. Allen is the new director of the orth Star branch of the prisoner of war opera­ '28Md, assumed his new duties as presi­ Drama Guild of Minneapolis. He re­ tions division, Provost Marshal Gen­ dent of the University of Washington cently left the navy as a lieutenant eral's office, became assistant director on September 1 of this year. Since commander after four years of service. of the division in 1943, and director in 1929, Dr. Allen had been executive Before entering the navy, he was direc­ 1944. dean of the colleges of Medicine Den­ tor at the University of Minnesota the­ tistry and Pharmacy of the University ater, St. Cloud Teachers College and As chief of the legal branch, Col. of Illinois which are located in Chi­ Technical high school, the University Tollefson was primarily concerned with cago. From 1934 to 1936 he was on of Washington and Northwestern Uni­ the planning, establishment and de­ the medical faculty of Columbia Uni­ ve rsity. velopment of procedures for the intern­ versity and in 1936 he became dean of the College of Medicine of Wayne -1941- ment of enemy aliens and later of the University in Detroit. Following his Capt. Niel M. Wreidt '4 1Chem, i 435,000 prisoners of war brought to the graduation from the Medical School at attending officers' advanced course at United States. As director of the pris­ Minnesota in 1928, Dr. Allen prac­ the field artillery school at Fort Sill, oner of war operations division, he was ticed medicine in Minot, N. D ., and Oklahoma. During the war he served charged with the responsibility of car­ returned to the campus in 1930 to in eight major European campaigns rying these regulations and policies into complete work for his doctor of phi­ and holds the Bronze Arrowhead and effect as well as supervising and direct­ losophy degree which was granted in the Bronze Star. ing the work of all branches of the 1934. -1942- division . Lr. (j.g.) Richard S. Downey '42Ex, H. J. Burgstahler '13, president of Drake is one of the several American Ohio Wesleyan University at Dela­ has been awarded the Air Medal for universities headed by men who have participating in anti-submarine patrols ware, Ohio, recently announced the degrees from Minnesota. Henry G. appointment of another Minnesotan to in the Bay of Biscay, November, 1943, Harmon '35Ph.D., is president of to February, 1944. He participated his faculty, Vant W. Kebker '31; Drake University. Last January, Fred­ '40Ph.D. Dr. Kebker, with the rank of in nine mISSIOns as navigator of a erick L. Hovde '29, former Rhodes patrol bombing plane. associate professor, will handle courses scholar and star Minnesota athlete, as­ in marketing, retailing and statistics. -1943- sumed his duties as president of Pur­ During the war he served in the Navy. Dr. Ladislans Molnar '43D, of New due University. During the war years, York, died last November. Mr. Hovde had been on leave from his Colonel Carl W. Hansen '26Ed; Mr. and Mrs. John Whiting Scott of position as assi tant to the president '40Ph.D., who was commanding officer Minneapolis have been appointed Con­ of Rochester University. In the early of the U. S. Armed Forces Institute, gresional educational missionaries for yea rs of the war in Europe he served as the extensive and far-reaching instruc­ ervice in the Near East. Mr. Scott secretary of the London office of the tion program oIIert::d the members of '43MA, was a tutor for three years in National Defense Resea rch committee, the armed forces by mail during the Tarsus, Turkey, in 1937 to 1940. Mrs. and in 1942 returned to Washington to war, has returned to civilian life as a - Scott is the former Gwendolyn E. become executive assistant to the chair­ sociate professor of education in the Stinger '39A. man of the NDRC. Teachers College of the University of Robert A. Van Nest '43B, is with incinnati. On May 1 of this year George A. the real estate department of Walgreen Selke 'l6Ed, became chancellor of the Alexander W. Luce '21E, has been Drug Co. in Chicago. University of Montana. For 16 years appointed to the chairmanship of cur­ -1944- he had been president of the Minne- riculum and head of the department of Joseph Catmull '44-45Gr, formerly ota State Teachers ollege at St. mechanical engineering at Pratt In­ with the speech department, is teach­ Cloud. He was in the army during the stitute in Brooklyn. Since 1942 he has ing at Ricks College, Idaho. war and spent 26 months with the mili­ been mechanical engineer on produc­ Dr. Theodore E. Bratrud '43M in tary government section in the Europe­ tion and personnel problems (or the Path, Dr. William C. Dodds '44Md, an theater and at the time of his re­ Fellow Gear haper 0., Springfield, Dr. Kermit L. Stensgaard '45Md, and lease last March he held the rank of Vt. Previously he had taught at Le­ Dr. George T. VanRooy '42Md, have major. high University, the University of joined the staff of the Bratrud linic New Mexico, and was head of the and St. Luke's Hospital, Thief River In the Montana position, Dr. Selke mechanical engineering department at Falls, Minnesota. succeeded another Minnesotan, E. O. the University of onnecticut. OCTOBER, 1946 49

Alumni Marriages

:J ie Lindermann and Dr. Harry !'II. Mr. and Ir. H. P. Arnesen announce aHd Washington. D. . :WIr. abin, also an fichel on '25D, both of t. Paul, were the marriage of their daughter, Ruth Vir­ attorney, formerly practiced in Lead, uth married la t June in 1\{ason City, Iowa. ginia '37HEc. to John F. Zalar '3SChemE; Dakota and a hington. he i on duty Th y will be at home at 491 tryker ve· '38MS, on June 25 in ewport, Minnesota. with Headquarters, AFWE P A. he i nue, l. Paul. Martha Bayne of Romeo, Michigan, and on of the original five W C officer to re­ Douglas P. ampbell '35A, were married port for duty with General MacArthur' • headquarters in u tralia in March, 1944. Cecile hapiro of New York and J u tu la t June in Yokohama, Japan. Previou 1. ' hiffere '30M ,were married recent­ to entering the Navy in October. 1942, 1\1r. • ly in Minneapolis. Mrs. chjfferes j a ampbell was a E ~ interviewer in Min· illy Lou David on and Donald W. case worker in one of th e large t social neapoli. He now is employed in General Braman '37 • were married 1 une 16 in agencies of its kind in the country. the MacArthur's ch-ilian personnel office. 1\lrs. Minneapolis. Jewi h Family ervice Institute of New Campbell, who e first hu band, a friend of Dr. and 1\1 . William R. Willer '371\1A; York. 'Ir. chjB:ere j an instructor in Campbell' in training day, wa killed in ·44Ph.D., are at home at 2803 Plea ant Ave­ health education at Columbia niversity action in 19403. i a Red Cro - worker in nue, l\linneapoli following their marriage and al 0 is ecretary of the national com­ Japan. Augu t 3. mittee on school health policie and man' Eunice Ann Me art '35Ed, of Detroit aging edi tor of cien e Public Relation Lake, Minne ota, and Jame T. an Art-· • ouncil, ew York. He i co·author of dalen of Lan down , Pa .• were married last Mary Jane Fisher '38Ex, of _' Iinneapolis, " utobiography of cience" and two more June in Detroit Lake-. They are at home wa married la t June in Willmar, Minne­ of hi hook are scheduled for pubucation at 152 E. Marsha]] Road, Lan downe. Irs. ota to Robert J. nderson of _iinneapoIi . in 1947. They make their hom e at 10 Van Art dalen formerly was junior high On July 8 Maria Pauli and Thomas P. Downing Lreet, ew York. school librarian at Rochester, Minne ·o ta. Ioore '38A. were married in Waubach, Mr. Van Artsdalen i an engineer in Phila· Holland. Mr. Moore spent a year in Eu­ • delphia. rope as a member of the counter intelli­ Gretchen R. Headley, '34Ed, and Jam gence corp of the army and now is a 'laish, Jr., of Los Angele were married Katherine L. Regan of finneapolis and ivilian employed by the army in personnel recently in Breckenridge, Minne ota. They Philip W. chulte '35A, of t. Paul were work in Fran1.-furt. Germany. They expect will make their home in anti ago, Chile, married la t luI. Th at home in to arrive in the tate next month. where Mr. -laish will serve as vi e consul Rosemount. at th e American embas y. Both formerly • • Ir. and ?lIrs. Alphon e Van Grien ven erved in uncion, Paraguay. Capt. \ era Iankinen • and Edwin Dr. and Mr. Courtland L. .\ gre. Mary Ial ed '39Ed) were married a ec· M. abin, Jr. 36L, were married in Manila ond time ill Minneapoli on eplember 14. '34Chem '37PhD, are at home in t. Paul P. 1. la t J Llne. Mr. ahin, attorney in tbe following th ei r recent maLTiaae. Mrs. Agre Their first ceremony took place October 31 Manjla office of the eLerans' dministra­ in enlo. Holland. 1\1r. an Grien ven is th e former Ellen wecl berg of Ben on. tion. formerly practiced in orthwood. Iowa Jan M. Irvine '34 ; '35Ed, and Kyl was a Red Cross worker in Rolland aod G. Cudworth '29Ex. were married August her bu band, a former actor, wa (In active 24 in Minneapoli. he i ule daughter of worker with the Out h underground. he Dr. and Mrs. H. G. Irvine '03Md. During returned shortly aIter th ir marriage and the waf he served over as with lhe nav), it look him nine monLhs Lo j in her here. nur e corp. • • KathT)n 1. ?lIe illiams '-lOREc, and Elaine Howe of Wa hington and llen George W. rim '.J--J,Ex; '·16, were married M. Teeler '32Ed, were married la t , um­ recently in t. Paul. They will make their mer in Mi111\eapolis. home in l. Paul. Both If. and Mrs. rim served with the Army in Europe. Ir. • rim now i a stu lenl in lnw at the ni­ Doris M. Me ra ken '44EcEd, und ' tan, ,'ersity. I y lJeJldoid '34Ed, were married J ul 16 in Minneupoli. They are at home in • pring6eld. Minne'ota, where Mr. lleUeloid lr. and Mr. . L. urrier allnOWlce the is in bu iness. marriage f their daughter. . RUllI Cur· 5U h NNESOTA AL M us rier '43Ed, to Frederick H. Poppe '41Ed, in Ja c k ~ oll\ ill e, F lorida, la t J un ... Befort! en· Mary Lou i n ad '46, and Robert F. DaUa Texa, on April 13. Their pre enl tering the avy, he was on the taff of Pro k '44Ex, wer married in 1inn apo" addres i : Rl. 2, Box 29, UlfPO t1, Miss. hem ical and metallurgical resear h of la t Jun. Ruth dair LaLone '41G , and Charles Thomp on P roduct Co., Cleveland, Ohio. irgini a Taylor '44 ,of I inneapol i< 11. Al len wer married last Ju ne in Minnc· Belly Jo Browne of Chattanooga, Tenn .. and Capt. eo rge M. Hardy of Pittsburgh. apoli . They are living in California. and Robert R. Grahn '43Ex, Minneapoli. Penn ylvania w re married J uly 26 in aI · R Ulh Dalton Raup '41 ; '41PJi , and and Daytonna Beach were married ugust ley Forge Gen ral ho pi tal po t chapel. t Edward G. Lowell were married July 21 at 17 in hallanoogo. Mr. Grahn, who erved I he Uni er ity Mr . Hardy was active a a Rockvill Cenler, ew York. in th e avy for three year in th Pa ific. meml er f the nion Board an I th(' II hirley M. Leiner '41 ,and Lt. Rob rt i a tudent at the University of F I rida. Univer' ity Council. For the pa l 18 month T . P atey of Boston, Ma ., were malTied J ean Johann and Donald Moritz '43Ex : , h ha been engaged in psychiatric work la t J une .in Big tone City, outh Dakota. '46. were ma rri ed la t mon th in :'I~ inneapo· in variou ho pi tal and at pre' nl i a They are at home in an nlonio, T exa . lis. clini al p ychologi t at all ey Forge Ho - where Lt. Patey i a memb r of the laH pital. apt. and IT . Hardy will attend of the Fort am Hou ton army hospital. Kathl een arroll •'47 Ex. and Harr T . Pennsylvania tate niver ity thi fall. Reasoner '44Ex, were married la' t month in apl. Hardy will omplet hi work in for­ On June 24 Ell n •Janda '42 , and apl. Minneapoli . fr. Rea oner is th author e try and Mrs. lIardy will b an a istant Ronald Fau l wer married at ia gara, of the recentl y published no el, "Tell Me in tno tor in the p ychology department W i con in. bout Women." , hile working for an ad van ed degree. J ean E lizab th Juliu of nder on, Indi· Julia T . Davis '45 , and Arthur B. ar· lo nna :'I Iae Thorgrim on '44Ex, and ana and Ibert C. W dge '42 IE, w('re ner '45Ex, were marri d recently in lin· Rllht'rt \f. Paul on '44Ex, were man-ied married April 13. They are at home at 111 neapolis. frs. Warner i the daughter of J " n,· 1-1 in \ 1 inneapolis. Oak treet, Binghamlon, ew York. :'I1r. Walter E. Davis '22Ex, and Mn. Davis Wedg i h ad of the production engineer· ( fary Par on, '22Ex). On Augu t 18 Lois• V . Denn tedt ·'IS HEe· ing department of Ozal id division of Gen· Ruth Dowell '4 .J.A , wa married eptem· J::d, Wab marri d in Harmony, Minne~ota . to ral ni line and Film orp .. in John, on ber g to Gates :'I\y r in t. Paul. t the Roderick E. tan of Zumbro Falk ~lr. City, New York. niver it) ~ h e was a member of the Union Starz is attending I1amline ni, p,it . Mar ell a E. Larson '46Ex, and Lt (jg) Board. Mrs. 1\1 ers i the daughter of Dr. virginia R. Larson '45Ex, and E. J ' ph he ter C. ron on '42Ex, were married and Ir. Au. tin 1\ . Dowell '25 I[ : '.32 PhD, :-kro ·h of Indep mien e, \' isco n.i n were J une 15 in l. Paul. Th y are at home at of I. Paul. Inan i d l a~t J un e. 20 Kenmor P lace, East Greenwi ch, R. 1. ir. and l\Ir . Rubert . 1. Balch, III are \ liriam ,I organ '45 ; '45Ed, III Fa 11 Mary . Lyman '1)6Ex, and J udd Rin"er al home at 616 Lin oln v nue, I. Paul, Chur h. Virginia and Joe Barlett were '42Ex. w('re married in Minnea po lis on ep· foll owing their marriage epl mber 7. Mr. marri d J un 1. They ji,e in William· tember 6. In October th y will be at hom Bal ch '4.J.Ex; '46, who was a marine pi lot I m g, Pennsylvania. on ro by Road, Wayzala. During the war during the wa r, i co ntinuing his o Ll rse in J a n ~ G. Park '46Ex, and Willia m Ray Mr. Ringer wa a dive bomber pilot in the ivil eng in eerin g. H i the on of 1r. and Shannon, Jr. '45Ex. w r married J"ne 22 Marine Corp. He played fo otball at the \Irs. Robert M. Balch, Jr. '19Ex. IIfls. in , I. PattI. They are at home at 876 University prior to entering the en ice and Balch, liT is th e lormer Darl ne L or· o cola venue" I. Paul. during hi training played wilh th Iowa ton. \ 1r. and Mr ~. Jerome F. mer,h. Jr. ea Hawks. Marcia \ . Berg '45 ; '45PH ,and Dr. I lary Lou ise Prem r ""5MdT) are at home Marie M. Magee '45Ex, and RobeI'I E. 'V1 arvi n S. Dale '4 10, were marri d June al .')69 Portland venue, ~ t. Paul loll ow­ Drummond '42 hemE ; '45·46, were mar 12. They are at home in Lu verne. \ l inne­ in g Ih ir marriag last June. ,\1r. ::-'m ersh J ied ugU'l 30 in Au tin, Iinnesota. ,ota. i, a ll l' nding medical school at Ih .. l ni\ r· Gwen Gilb rt '45Ex, and apt. illiam Tos.. ]'. Foot \~JEd, of l\Iinneapoli, ... it y. G. MacLean, Jr. '42Ex, wer married in wa ma rri d la, t June to Harold E. Grier _\ Ir. and 1\1ni. car E. 01,on (Lorraine Minn ea p o li ~ ugu l 17. They make Ilwir of hino, alifornia. \ . mith '45 11Ec) ar al hom in Keewat­ hom in herry Point, N. C. nn e Me ,onnell of Taladega, labama in . Minne ota fo ll owing IIH'ir marring Ro e Mitchell of ydney, ustralia, and and LI. Le ter W. arlander, J r. '44 ld, of Jun!' 8 in Duluth. lr. Ol ~o n i. altending Howard ufdprheid e '42£ ,of ew 1m i\linneapoli", werp married last June in the lI ihbing Junior ollege. were married July 18 by tran '·Pacific tele· chapel of Kennedy General Ilospila!' Mem· Joa n . Valentyne of Glen 0 and Dr. phone. ir. ufderh id now i. en rout e phis. Tennessee. Hi charcl . Smith ' 15 td, were marri cI in to tli e nitt'd tate. Gail rordaunt \ J6Ex, and ,rOil Led , Glenco(' 13 t J un('. They are al hom e in '4..JEx; '46, wer married la't Jllnl' in , l. St. Paul \ here Dr. ll1ilh will sen e his • Inlernsbil at t. Jo cph' ITo spital. Mary Elizabeth aron and Ll. (jg) lif· I aul. Eliza lwl h '\ . ~ eigel '4SEx, and Jen' .\ n· ford T. Fay, Jf. '43B, wer malTi d la, t Mrs. Winif recl Robin on '4 lEd, and Theodore . f1 aeu~,ler were married last k".. I il, ~r n were married la t J ulle in June in i\linneapoli. LI. Fay i the on Jllne in 1inneapoli <. Tb yare a t home \[innl'apoli,. The ar at home in Way- of Mr. a nd 1\11'-. . T . Fay 'J5Ex. of ;\Iinnc· at 3229 eco nd ve nu e outh, Minneapolis. lula. apoli . Alida Rulh Digerness and Roger J . Rie· Eleinor 1. IJagen •'45 1IEc, and Winford math '4 Ed, of 1inneapoJis, were married I Ted 1 \ nderHo n were marrier! r('('<'IlII) "' re enil) in Eveleth. Mr. Riemath erved in \1 inneapolis. th e Marin.. 'orp and rmy ir orps and NEWS ITEMS now is in th e in L1ran e bu ~i n es s in Minn('· Kurl' n E. ndcr 'on• '46 ,and Rob rt C. apoli . Bert f· I,,·n · 16E\. ; '46-47, were married ep­ l a ry Ellen Figi and orn lills r. Judu News items about yourself I('mher 7 in ~rinneapoli ~. '43Pharm, wer married eptember 7 in \ alborg GorniILka'46 . of t. Paul and Ro bester, 1inne ota. They will be at homp or another alumnus are ap­ R('v. , Ienn G. Tl tH.by of Lewi town, !l10n­ at 1546 eventh Avenue .E., Ro h tt- r. preciated by the editors. Ad­ la na were manicd 18. t June in t. Paul. orma Arl in Larson of Minneapolis E\elyn Koernrr '46 , and Dunne ' . Ri,· and Rob rt D. Powell '43 g,'ci, of I. P a ul dress y our news to the office berg '16£" '('re married Jun .. ~2 in ,t. were married la t Jun in 'fadi_on, Wi . I 811i. eon in. Th yare at home in Ames. Iowa. of the Minnesota Alumnus. Floren Ie ker '43 , and Jamp Bakl'r • were married June 14. 205 Coffman Union, Univer­ .Ian" C. \\) man '16E ,and DavHI .. I on· nell) . J6£:I.. were marri .. d lu , t monlh in Mr. and fr . Lindsay P ower '43 IE, are sity of Minnesota, Minneapo­ at home a t 1 38 ~ Lakeland venue, Lake· "I. Pa"l. woou, Ohio. They were marripc! J ttn r :~2 lis. al Wilm tt ·, JJ]inoi,. ["" und ~ [ r s. Ri h•ard L. ,ehrillf!, I Kalh- irginia Lou isema n of P asadena , 1\ n .lane Brol n '47E ) are at home in alifornia and Ll. (jg) Rob rt . K mpe Juci..,,,nville, Florida. foll uwing t1wir ma r· '43 hemE, of t. P aul , were married in * lIagO' la"'l June in ~ l inn('apn l i, .0Dmoll llemorial "Cllioll. H ol/lecol/I ill " Heodquarlers for Alumlli

1946 Alumni Homecoming Dinner, November 8

MI E OT will meet }JunIne in th annual up on the day f th dinn 1'. It is important that Hom oming game in ,\ 1 morial "tadium on r en ation, I e made in ad\ ane b au::. of th - \ mb r 9. On th preceding'\ eniug. inn ota ne ::>sit , of pIa ing a d finit dinn r rd r with alumni will h Id th i1' traditi nal Hom comina Din­ the Ili n food er\'i . n r in Lh main ballroom of Coffman r morial 11- The stud nt ornmittee ha~ xL nd d an invitati n i n \1 ith th pr si.d nts of the tv. 0 uni\ r::.itie" Dr. to alumni to att nd the Hom 'oming dan III olT­ J. L. orrill of Minn ' ota and Fred L. Ho d '29. man nion on aturda ' e ening. 0\ moer 9. at a~ th aHe t- of honor. lumni of Purdu n i\ er· nin o'clock. The pri is 2.40 a upl and r "er· :,it living in Minne' ota hay also been in ited to \ aLi ns ma be made through Lhe nion offic , att nd and hay a part in th dinn r program. Th sLud nts \\ ill rev i, e man of th Lrad itiol1al lllong th _p ak r , in add iti n to the t\IO presi­ Hom ollling proaram feaLure:::. includincr th holl" d Ilt:., will b member::. of th ('oaching :::taA':.' of d oration ' and th parade which will b _Laged at Purdue and Minn oLa. 10 0' lo'k 11 aturdav. The student Var8it - sho\\ Pric of Lh dinner will be $1. -0 p'r plat and allll the traditional p pie::.t will b h Id n ·Frida~ r :.' ration, h uld b made tll roltl7h the ,\ iumni v tllug. ffi~., 205 offman nion. For Lhose \\ho \\'i~h to Plan no\\ t ,isit th campu::. for the Homec 111- leI pholl Lheir reservation~, the numb r i::. '\lain ing inner an I the other f atur s on the H m - 8177, E tension 13. The lid.. Jl~ llIay h pick d toming progrum 011 N ,ember 8 and . The highly reactive acetoacetic ester, long a favorite of organic chemistry profe or have a sumed a new importance in modern indu - try. Two r eaction which indicate the many po ibilitie of these com­ pound. in organic ynthe is are hown h ere.

Roth meLll) I and eth) I acetoace tat e arc :l\ :lilahle in com· mere·ial quantities. Otllt' r estel's, 8 11 h as butyl and mcth) I· amyl can be supplied in l'rsrar h amounls.