The Millllesota AllIllllli Weeklv., 'The Golden Gophers of Th UniverSIty 01

VIC tory Years

A 50 -Yard Line View of Minnesota Football

What do you know a bout the Gophers who are now in training for the 1936 season? Meet them in the booklet THE GOLDEN GOPHERS . It includes pictures of all the lettermen, a preyiew of the 1936 campaign, and ot her information about players and coaches that will be of interest to every alumnus interested in the game and in the activities af the Gophers. It has been hailed by sports writers and by alumni for its completeness in picturing 50 years of Minnesota football. The activities of the teams of 1933, 1934 and 1935 are featured. The book of 64 pages, 8 'Iz x 11, contains more than 20,000 words and 90 pictures of players and scenes. It includes the records of all Minnesota football teams from 1886 through 1935. Every alumnus will prize a copy of this souvenir booklet. One Dollar. Gener al Alum ni Association lI8 Administration Bldg. Univer sity of Minne ota The Story of Champions Minneapoli . S long as football is played the record of Minne- This is my order for olle copy of the souvenir A sota teams of the past three seasons will stand as booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPIIEllS. Bill me for one dollar when the boo/': is mailed. one of the most brilliant achievements in the history of the popular American intercollegiate sport. This record is compiled in print and pictures in the souveni r Name ____ booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. The order blank at the left is for your convenience in Address ordering your copy. Enclose the one dollar if you desire. Otherwis e you will be billed when the book is mailed. City The Minnesota AlulDni Weekly The Official Publication of ~finnesota Alumni

VOLUME 3S • .-\PRIL 4, 1936 • SUMBER 2-

Some Limitations of Economic Planning

HE everal "'Titer who have con­ BlI most part he can determine for him­ T tributed to thi eries during the Dean R. A. tevenson self how he hall pend hi income. pa. t everal week. have shown by Consumption, for the mo t part. i- School of Bu.s1ne II Administration concrete illu trations that our eco­ till an individual matter. nomic y'tem is an extremely com­ The question, then. i one of degree. plicated affair. The interrelation of How far hould governmental control the various parts are 0 finely attuned ing alternati\'e to the chaotic controls go at pre ent? hould we immediately that even a light adju tment at olle clo e the gap, going all the way to of the automatic price y tern The point cau:e rcpercu ion that re:l.ct complete goYernmental planning? throughout the entire structure. Wt! typical argument in support of thi program i. simple in the extreme. Un­ Fundamentally, the que-tion become­ adopt a program calling for the pur­ one of relative effectivene - of govern­ cha e of newlv mined silver at a prict' der the pre ent _ystem a large part of our producti"e plant capacity i­ ment and private agencie in making ;;omewhat above the world market significant decision . The same general idle and millions of workers are un­ price. The effect of thi policy locally problems exi t whether the control is is hardly noticed. Yet in a hort time employed. Under governmental plan­ rung. it is claimed, thi. could not hap­ left to competitive force or i vested there i a financial crisis in China in the go\"ernment. It is necessary directly trac able to that program. pen because price would not be an (1) to forecast people' desire: .\merica adopts a tariff policy that important factor determining whether tends to re trict the home market for or not production would be carried (2) to forecast the productive abil­ local producer and hortly we 10 e our forward. The government would order ity of the people to meet their desire ; foreign markets for other good. .\ the plant to continue in operation and (3) to disco\'er and make full u e mea ure i' propo ed calling for the thus keep the worker employed. Goods of natural resource and technical pro- reduction of crop acreage devoted to would be produced for u.e and not for ce es; rai ing corn. Thi re'ults in an in­ profit. This i an ideal to which no (4) to determine the rate at which crease in the price of hog a intended, one could take exception If it could be capital plant _hall be increa ed as an but more land i devoted to dairy cat­ made to work effectively. uch a plan aid in future production and as a tle and the dairy indu try become ad­ would be va tly uperior to the pre"­ temporary limitation of immediate con- ver Iy affected. The whole tructure ent economic -y tem. umption. may be likened to a toy balloon­ If perfect deci iOIl were made on depre it in one place, and a bulge HERE are certain limitation to ef­ all of the. e four que tions. our eco­ appear 'omewhere else. T fective economic planning. however, nomic ill would be over and we would In con:idering the merit of po i­ that mu t be recognized even though not be concerned with po -ible change­ ble ways to remedy our economic dif­ we may ubscribe fully to the ideali-m in the economic structure. We have ficultie' it i. wcll to take a realistic of the planninu program. \. a matt<,r evere depre ion and unemployment view of the ituation lest we be led of fact. government has played a very largely because of mistake in judg­ a,tray by an apparently very simple important role in economic activity ill ment upon the e que:tion-. The princi­ plan that, in fact, i. quite fanta tic. the past. We are not concerned here pal reason why poor deci ions are made That the price sy tern doe- not work with the choice between complete is lack of knowledge of the factor" ideally is perfectly obviou.. Any cco­ government control and complete involved. The government is in no bet­ nomi t can point out flaw in the private control of economic enterpri.,e. ter position than the individual to system ju t a effectively as extreme .\. " Profe"or Yaile p inted out l~t predict the desire of the people 0 proponent for radical change. The week, individuali 'm, a that term has long as there is free choice in the economi t. howe\ er. may -ee in a pro­ been used in recent year-. long .ince selection of con umer good . Prediction posed change certain force that may ha cea_ed to exi.t. Restrictions of in­ may be pos ible if there i authority cau. e wor e maladju:tment than the du try and com mer e through uch to compel the people to con ume those ones they propo e to cure. He i un­ uevice a the protectiye tariff anrl thing. that the government ha de­ willing to accept thc thesi that mere other sp<'cial privileges have been a creed hall be produced. change is progre·s. In rai ing doubts wry significant feature of our eco· a to the efficacy of propo I'd change' It i' inconceivable that anyone he i often accu -I'd of being reaction­ nomIc IiII'. There till remains, how­ would u"ge t that ~uch extreme ary. Thi i ju t as unfair to the e, r. a very wide range within which power" be vested in government in economist a, it would be to criticise the individual may exercise his own America even for the purpo.e of at­ the physician "hen he point out the judgment in economic matters. H, taining economic stability. '\\hat in­ ineffectivene,s of patent medicine as may choo. e hi O\\"n occupation: he ha dividual or group of individuals that a cure for cancer. the freeuom of choice as to the type would make up the government'­ Organized, governmental, economi of enterpri I' into which he may place directing agency could speak with planning is urged as the most promi - hi. per,onal iuve tments; and for the authority on what the .\.merican people 43'2 THE l\ItNNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY should con ume in order to attain the crnmental agencies are in a much bet­ better life? Yet i I' they were not grant­ ter position to ration the IIpplies of ed tlli authority, they would be in natural re ource from gencration to no better po ition to forecast people's generation than i private industry. de irc than private bu ines. i today. The government can a!. 0 plan more Furthermore, and this i the ignificant fft'('tively in prote ting the individual point, the errors of a centralized author­ again~t th risk~ of iudu trial life. ity would bc greatly magnified. Whcn Vn mploymcnt insurance and old agc error are made by a great many in­ b('ncfit~ are properly government func­ dividual producer respecting the prob­ tions in modern ciety. The very com­ able futU\' market, there are orne plexity of economic organization rt'lJ­ off et . They do not all makc the ame der the individual impotcnt to protect mi take. himself. . either can private indu. try assume the full re. ponsibility for all Means of Control of the risks of unemployment. And let u not forget that thce ri ks would In the sccond place, ther i' lack of b prescnt under government-plalJned knowledge as to the mean of control. economy a well as under a private, If we are to accept the the~is that competitive economy. The e two field" govcrnmental planning would not go the utilization o{ natural resourcc the extreme length of dictating in the anti the protection o{ the individual field of consumption-that the indi­ again t economic insecurity include vidual would be left some mea. ure of question of such general intere t and choice in the u e of hi income--therc the techniques of control are 0 well de· would still be the que tion of influcnc­ DEAN R. A. TEVENSON veloped that they can be admini. tered ing the market by mean of control de­ effectively under centralized govern­ vices. Thi can be accompli hed only ment authority. B yond the e two to the extent that cau e and effect re­ field . , however, the activities of gov­ lationship in the market are clearly There are . ome out tanding examplcs ernment will be more effectivc in understood. Economist have learned of dfici ntly managed governmental de­ e~tablishing the rull' of conduct for a great deal about the busine s cycle. partment or agencies, but there arc private indu try than in authoritative They know, for example, the force al 0 enough evidence of inefficiency planning. The F deral Trade Com­ that cause depre ion and to ome ex­ attributable directly to political in­ mi sion, the curitie and Exchange tent they understand how counter­ fluence to make one hesitate to ug­ ommJ . Jon and imilar regulative forces may be brought into play. They gest that we rapidly expand thc gov­ bodic~ are able to establi h trade do not know as yet, however, the ernmenL ervice into new fields. practice regulation that tend to pre­ extent to which the pecific forces There are many more limitation on vent th un crupulous individual from they bring into play react through the government planning that one might operating in an unfair or un ocial entire price structure. There are no uggest but the three that have been manner. uch governmental unit con­ definite criteria, for example, that mentioned are particularly significant. stitute, in a en e, an economic police would determine precisely when and to Lack of knowledge as to objectives, force. what extent changes in reserve re­ lack of knowledge as to means, and quirement would produce a de ired inadequate per onne! are limitations Collecting Information change in commercial borrowing at the that prompt one to ugge t caution banks, and this i one of the imple t in rapidly expanding the ope of gov­ Finally, the government i in a of the control device that would be ernmental activity in e onomic mat­ position to collect and dis eminate in­ required to regulate our economic ter . The e deficiencie , of cour e, arc formation that will make it pos~ible machine. present in the economic order a it for inclividuals to arrive at more in­ exists, bu t to transfer suddenly the telligent deci ion. For many years the Capable Personnel decision-making machinery to govern­ Department of Agriculture ha col ­ A third, and in many reop cts the ment is apt to increa e rather than de­ lected extensive data on crop and mo t seriou limitation on government­ crea e the unfavorable effect . prices. This information has aided al planning, is the problem of securing As IVa tated earlier, this i a que - farmer and dealer in commodities capable personnel in the government tion of degree. We have had ome gov­ in planning their operations. If such service to do the job. It is unncce ary ernmental planning in the pa~l. Gov­ activities were xtend d to include to make any disparaging compari on ernmental control of the wa ting natur­ regular report on production, inv('u­ between government and privatc in­ al re ource is almo t es nlial to in­ tory and prices in other industrial lines, dustry to raise grave doubts a to surc de irable ocial ends. ome much progres would be made in eco­ the po sibility of obtaining at the mea ure of control over such matter~ nomic planning. present time a highly efficient, policy­ ha already been exerci ed hy govern­ We cannot expect much greater d termining corps in the gove.rnJ"!lellt ment. Much of the forest domain. for tability in economic activity either service. It is true that there JS mef­ exam pIc, is now a national or slate under the control of private enterprise ficiency, nepoti m and incptitud in for t area and is rigidly superviscd. or by the government until we have a private industry. The forc~s . of com­ Thi is one field in which there ha b tter understanding of the {unction petition, however, tend to ehmmate the been developed an efficient and highly ing of the economic sy t('m. Any organ­ less efficient and thus to r('duce the trained personnel. Furthermore, the ization is limited by the intell ig nce of social con equences, wher as in thc criteria for determination of the proper the people that run it. To this nd \'l' government service there is no auto­ amount of production are more definite ran on ly hop for a better functioning matic, offsetting influence. In fact, than they are ill other industrial lines. of our economic ystem as the quality errors and wa te tend to b come The long-tim' ilJtcrests of society are of the per. onnel in control of hoth standardized procedures in the govern­ of more ignificance than the satis­ governml'nt and privat indu~try i., ment service. fHction of imm('diate demands. Gov- improved. APRrL L 1936 433

Spring Registration Shows Increase Alumni Clubs ARLY regi. lralion figures from the Hovde to Roch ester S El'ER.IL Jiinnesota alumni E office of Regi~trar Rodney ;'II. clubs lun'e meetings sched­ RED HOVDE '29, who ha erved 'Vest how an enrollmenl increas" of uled for .I pri!. .llum ni , ecretary len p 'r c nl over the figure~ for t hl' F a a. i tant director of the General :.pnng quarler of last year. .\ tolal ollege of the Univer ity inee the or­ E. B . Pierce '()~. u'a.' present at a of II ,163 tuden thad regi lered on ganizalion of that unit four years ago, JIillllesota dinner ill Kall$as City Monday, the fir t day of cia e thi ha. heen named a i tant to President on ,lpril .J. The T"irgillia IInit u-iLL _\Ian Valentine of the niver ity of 4uarter. hold a meeting 011 _lpril 16 u'hile Roell(' ter at Roche. ter, Xew York. ~lr. Recording a lotal of 3,907 enrolled. alumni '!k-ill cooperate 1cith the the Art college .howed an increa.e of IIonle will continue with hi dutie at 52 ~ tudents over the 3,383 regi tration )Iinne ota until the end of tbe 1936 chic clubs of Little FaUs in plan­ of la't year. The other large college, ummer e ion. ning a meeting for April 8, It is with enrollment of approximately 1.000, As part of his work at Rochester. he possible that Jlillnesota gradu­ al\ had ubslantial gain. will have charge of the admini. tration ates in Cl1!cinnati and Clel;eland of new prize .cholnr hip which will be In the ollege of Education. with a u'ill meet late in the month, total regi tration of 1,085, an increa e available al that ,chool next fall. There of 30 students enrolled. The ol\ege is a po,.,ibility' alo that he may do A committee of the Minllesota of Engineering and Architecture and ornc teacbing. While at ;'IIi nne ota he Alumni Cilib in Seattle is already the College of griculture, Fore .. try ha taught cla es in chemistry. making plalls for the reception of and Home Economic, both a hade Following lli graduation in 1929, the football team in that city ill undl'r l,OOO in total enrollment, ho\\ Hovde pent three year' at Oxford a gain of 37 and 205, re pectively. a Rhone' ~c holar. While a student at eptember lrhen the Co-phers The continual enrollment increase in ;'Ilinne.ota he tarred in football. ba - play the l ·llil'er.~ity of Washing­ the ,eneral collcge wa not interrupted. ketball and track. lIe wa, quarterback tOil. iuce th' total of 776 i 50 gr ater than and a brilliant hall carrier 011 football the number regi .. tered last pring. The team coached by Dr. larence W Graduate school approaches the Gen­ ,pear . eral col\eg in cnrol\ment with a 7'2 in­ Columbia. the Lniver.,ity of Toronto. Crt'ast' to a Iota I of 709. the rni\'er,ity of Califo~nia, Harvard With thc exception of pharmacy and Win Fellowships uniYer-ity. ~nd Oxford uni\'er.;it". where ",as a Rhode ·c holar. . nursing, thc professional chools showcd IIHEE memhers of the ;'IIinnesota h~ light rl'gUrnlion increa es, although T faculty aud an alumnus are amon~ In addition to contributing articles only a ,ingle additional medical , tu­ the (lO \\innrr.· of the twclfth annual to the anadian Historical Reyiew. dt'nt l'molled to hnng the total of the fcillm ,hip a ward annouuced Sunday Qu een·.~ Quarterh'. Dahou,ie Re ...;ew ;'IIerlical school to 6JO. ,\ registralion hy the John Simon Guggenheim ::'I1e­ and the Annal, of the ,\.mericao _\cad­ of '!8!J in the Law school resulted from n~orial Frlluwship foundatiun. em~' of Political and ocial ~ci ence. Dr. all illcrca.'e of 19 prospecli\'e In\\YTrs. The uniwr.ity nll'n are Dr lifford )Ii\l, ha< puhli,hed sewral work, 00 \ suhstantial gain of 78 studt'llls \\ as Kirkpatnck. professor of sociology: D r. Briti~h colonies. recorded in thc Busines_ chool \\hirh Lennox \ Igt'l'Iwll ;'Ifilk a"istant pro­ Dr. Kirkpatrick', fdlO\y,hip appoint­ has a regi. Iration lotal of 4:38 The fcssur of politiral sl·ienrl·. and Dr. Er­ ment i for an inn',tigation in Ger­ lJniycrsity coJie!!;e, "'hich alway' fluc­ II '.t Staple, O'~ood. as. i,t'lnt profl''Sor mam' and Austria of the cultural status luate., slightly arollnd thc 50 mark. hac! of hi .lory. GlaJl\,ille 'Vynkoop Smith. of ,,:omen, and of clinical nnd p. ycho­ an enrollmcnt increase of 3. ·~ . I, of Cold Spring. ;'IIinJl('.snta. is the analytical method, ill relation to mari­ Thl' lalt>st comparatiyc regi lration fourth "inncr from ::'IIilluesota. tal adjustments. fiITu!'e, hy colll'ge<; are as follows : Dr. Kirkpatrick. Dr. }Till, and ;'Ilr. ... inc!? hi. "capital punishment" was HI'!5, 19:JG 19 ~1J , lIIith \\ ill go n hroad to carr~ 011 crea­ puhlished in Dr. Kirkpatril'k ha Genrral ...... 77() 7'!1l the and re.search work. Dr. Osgood \Hitten "Intelligence and Immigration." 19'?6: "Religion in Human ,\ffairs," Ulliyer~it~ ...... , ... JO 17 \\ ill remain in the l"nited ~tate' to pre­ \rts ...... •.. :3.907 3,St1:l pare a hook on ::'I10nt:lI\a as a study of 19'29, aod oumcrou article for socio­ Enmneerina ...... 9tO 90:1 th' e\'olution of a typie:d far \\t"tern logical journal. and other periodical-. \g~ellltllr; ...... 90 7(l:l ,tall' Since 1930, Dr. Kirkpatrick has been Law ...... 2 9 270 ,\t the c10. l' of the present school a member of tilt' l'ni\'er,ih- of )Iiulle­ Icdi me ...... 650 619 \l':\l" in June. Dr. ~Iilb \\ill I 'an' for .sota staff. He \\ as at Br~\\ II univer­

Nursing •••••••••• 0 •••• 369 40'! 15 month~ of \\ ork ahroad. Ill' tir,t sity, allc! the rniYcrsity of Penn. yh-allia Dentistry ...... 2J9 t23~1 will go to England to look through o!li­ before coming to ;'Ilil{lll',ota. D~. Kirk­ Dt'lItnl Hygiene ...... ,i9 n eial rl'conk Hnd tben \\ ill continlle hi .. patrick \\as horn at Fitchhurg. ::'I1a < ..

Mine ' 0 •••• ...... 16:l 1S6 tnl\ l'b to make a comparalin' st lldy of o tober 2'1. 1 9 . ami recei\'ell hi, _\ .B, Pharmacy ...... l:n 135 the po't-\\:lr political goYernnll'Jlt Hnd dcgree frol11 Clark uniwr;.it y in 19'?0 Chemi.stry ...... 370 :B2 l'('(lnomil' .sit nation in lIang rOil!!;, the and hi ~L\. from the same institution Education ...... 1.0R.> 1.0J5 ~traits rttlement. and the '\!alav in 19'!'~. and hi~ Ph.D. degrce from the Bu 'ine ...... 43 ' 360 ,tate". "ith om pari sons :lnd l'ontra"t'~ l-niwrsity of Pennylyallia in 19~J. Graduale ...... 709 637 dm\\ n from the Philippines and .Ja\-a. Publications by Dr. Osgood include Befml' l'oming to thl' l'niyersity of thc "Day of the attleman" and arti­ Total ...... 11.163 10.10' :'Ililllll'sola in 19'2 . Dr. )[ills \\ as a des on agricultural histor\". Hc \Va­ The ncwly organized In.stitute of tutor in hi,tor~' at St. IIugh\ college. born Octoher ~9. 1 , at Lynn, ;'lIas' .. Technology. con'isting of t he three thfnn1, England. Born in Vancouver. and \\ a.s graduated from Dartmouth ll'('hlliral ~l'ho(\ls hnd n total l'nroll­ Canadil .•J Illy :lO. 1<9G Dr. ;'Ilill, wa" college ill un '!. From 19'2 t to 19_6 he menl of 1. n:l. cducall'd at' llll' l'ni\l'rsily of Briti h \Hh as.;istant in hi tor~' nt the Ulliver- 4S4 THE MINNESOTA LUMNI WEEKLY sity of Wi con in. After receiving hi lo Old .\ge and Unemployment In ur­ Ph.D. degree at Wi con in in 1927 he anc " by Profc or Enll'r~(J1l p. ' chmidt continued there as an instructor in his­ of the d 'pal'lment of et'onomi(' , tory for two years. and th n came to .. landing Orders and Policie for Pub­ l\linne ota as an assi tant profesor. lic Health ur~cs" hv ".lis, Eula B. l\lr. Smith, who was appointed for Butzerin, dil'e lor of U;(' ('0111'. c ill plIll­ the preparation of a book on the West lic health nul'. ing, allll ")lcnlal ;)lId Indie, de.igned to be a history of Personal Hygicne" by Dr. '''illiam the dev lopment of their character, was O'Brien, a socinlc profe. SOl' of pathol­ born at t. Cloud, Minn., June 28. ogy. 1.901. He was graduated from the lll­ ver ity of Minnesota in 1924. Mr. mith ha written "IIi toric Ornament To China ~or the Tombstone Trade," published Crop brcl'ding and production prob­ III 1.9_6. and articles and plays in .\t­ lems in hina will engage Dr. H. K. la~tlc :Monthly, National Gcographic. :\lmne .ola Quarterly and Player Hayes, chief of the clivi ion of agroll­ }\lagazlU . omy and plant genetics on the farm Sin e Its establishment in 1925 by campus, "ho . ailed for a year's tay form r United States Senator and irs. from Van('ou"er on :'\larch 21. lIe will imon Guggenheim as a memorial to be asso('iat d with the nalional agri­ a son. thc Guggenheim foundation ha cultural resrar h bureau of the Chinese ministry of indu.lries. and will advi e grant~d more than $l,~OO,OOO to assist Amcflcan cholars, wnter. composers on hre'etling wheat, rice. cotton and and arli t to carryon their work in potalocs. the nitcd States and abroad. The tipend.s normally are $2,000 a year, but V ocatiollal Guidance are adJusted according to the needs of URING the past '2.j years more each f lIow. D than 5000 students hal'e attend­ Romer ,J. mitl! '26 r. profe. or of Thi year's grant total $115,000. ed services at the Unit'('T.tify Lutheran iudu trial ducalion, took charge of a Thirly-eight of the fellow appointed Chl/rch of Ilope. Thirteenth .ll'enue parley on vocallOnal guidance en-ice this year will carryon their work ollthea.'Jt and Sirth freet. u'hile resi­ at a conference of educational advi er abroad, 16 will remain in the United dellt on the campus. Jnd dllring that of C. . . camps at Dunw'oody in titute Stales, and six will work abroad as period of 25 years the chl/Tch ha.'J had :larch 17. Approximately 75 college well as in this country. b1lt one pa.'Jtor. thl' Rellerelld Christian graduates now doing educational work SCTh'er Thorpe. On Palm Sunday, in camps were presenl at the confer­ Board Chairman .lpril 5, he will obseTl'e hj.~ 25th anni­ ence. I'ersary as pa.~tor of the rhllrrh. OLLOWING retirement of lhe 011 fhe el'ening of . t pril G. mallY Consultant F president of the la sachu ctts alllmni alld stlldelli.~ I('ill join thr mem­ Institute of Technology from the a­ bers of the Tegll/ar rnllgrl'f/atioll in Dean 1\lch in E. Haggerty of lh coi­ tional Re earch Fellow hip board in honoring Pastor alld ,ll rs. Thorpe at l ge of etlucalioll Ita, ac('rplcd a po"i­ phy ic, malhemalic- and chemislry, a receptio'll in the rlllm·/i parlors .•tl­ tion a. con, ullant for the educational John T. Tate, profe .01' of phy ic, at though still a C011l parafil,ely yOllllg policie commi,ioll uf lh National the 'niversity, ha been appointed to mall. he is the nldl'st Jl(/ .~ Ior 0/ hi.~ Education as.ociation. a body creatt,c1 the board. ynod ill point of sen'ire in ,1/illl1l'­ recently to d y lop long-range' planning The board, wbicb is administered by apolis alld se1 l eTa/ministers alld clluTch for th impro" ment of American the National Research council and en­ dirJllitarie .. will greet Dr. Thorpe at the school. Its policie will be dcveloped trusted by the Rockefeller foundation, rerl'pi inn. from contact with eduealional and meels this month in Wa hington, D. ., ('ivic leader ' lhroughoul lh counlry. to consider candidates for fellowship ,lildrrd Loughrea ·:l.>Ed. ~ l. Paul in their respective fields. George H. hortl('y '30E. Ohio ~ta l e teacher, ha. also h('cn appointed con­ They award fellowships for po t-doc­ univer ity; Philip T. :milh '31 Tr. of sultant. torate work to out tanding men for olle the Mas, a('hll~ctts In~litut e of Tech­ or two year. nology; and .Joseph Yalas('k '21Gr. a - Debating Honors Alumni and laff members of thc ociate profes~or of physic,. niversity of Minnesota who havc ~lillnesola rl'pn'scntalivc of Delta studied under their fellowship include Nursing Institute Sigma Rho. national fort'l1 ic fraternit~. Walker Bleakn y 'SOGr, now at ­ lil'd ror first place in the debal(' M'S­ lon; John Frayne '21Gr, now al Cali­ Three on the niver~ity faculty pre­ sioJlS II ilh lhc Universili of I'\orlh fornia; Edward L. Hill '28Gr, assi taut sided at sessions of the Ii fl h a 11 11 lIa I Dakola, Wi ('omiu and 'hicago nl the professor of theoretical phy ics here; Public Health Nursing ill~litule l\Tarch debale and c1iscusioll 101lrnamrnl held John H. Williams, a sistant professor 26-2R. They "ere Profesor Ruth E . in :.\IndisOll last " ek. of physic, who receivcd hi fellowship Boynlon 'Q()l\Id. a ling dirertor of lhc Represl'utat ives of the orgullizalion elsewhere; Ernest Lawrence '2SGr, now Sludents Heallh Servi(·('. Dr. E. C. "ere sen l from inslitulions a~ fill' (,list at the Univer ity of California; William Hartley, dir clor of jluhlic h('allh nurs­ as Weslern It '('rv in lewland. Ohio. Wallace Lozier 'SlGr, teaching at ing, and Dr. F. l\f. F ·Idlllrn, rpiclellliol­ and as fur ,n'sl as thl' Ullivl'rsil \ of olumbia university; Louis R. Max\\ell ogist in the divi ion of prevl·nla.blr dis­ Wyoming. filll1C'sola ml'l1 Jllll'liciput ­ '27Gr, with the bureau of chemistry ease. Dr. Feldman took part in :l jury ing were Gordon Pehr~(ln. Harold )lal'­ and oil at Washington; Walter M . panel discllssioll on tuberculosis CUIl­ glllies. Hn., Ir"in and Kenneth Nielson '25Gr, of Dukc university; lrol. P(·lcrson. P. Kenn th Pelrr '011 "Oil Vladimir B. Rojansky '28Gr. nolV at the peech. on the program included fourlh pia e out of S6 l'lltrallls in lhl' Union collcge, Schenectady, . Y.; "Social Sccurity "ilh 'hief Refrrell e di~ells~i()n contc l. 435 APRIL 4, 1936

Football Sqllad Opens Training Period

tH'JIER lltldl'lf'. in fhe ouldoor at Balo1l Rl)uge. In thl' "conr! :,erie rJi ..:>, fir t; hicago, SLi, ,ecolld; Illi­ G illter('oll.·~iat(' ~J)(J1b :In: now of game,. un the schedule the (;op}u:rs Ilois . .59. third. preparing for c'olllpelillOn. The llll'm­ \lOll two from .:'.lis,is ippi Coil ' ge. .\ Geor~e ;\Iati on led the Gopher bers of ti,e tra('k, lenni, golf and f('ature of tile second win {)\'t'r ;\lis- ill their champion. hip mar h. placing ba eball team. will cngagr in Big Ten i.. ,ippi wa a long home run frolll tIlt' fir.t in the all-around competition. compt:lition thi~ . pring" hi Ie the foot­ bat of Edwin \Vi(ll'th who wa ,hifl.. d )rati~()n had an all-around score of ball . quad is making pr('pafalion for from the pitching box to the outfield 370. He placed fir t in the horizontal thc campai~n Oil the gridiron next fall. Ray King, another notecl foutball per­ bar.. ecoml in the hor:,e and fourth in During the pring vacation period former, took his turn on the mount!. tum bling. Fair of hicago wa - econd various ~IiJln uta teams were bu y. The Gopher, returned to the ('ampu­ in the all-around competition. The Wfr. tling and gymna tic teams lhi week to continue their practice .. e - Gopher~ to place in the meet were: competed in national intercollegiate . ion m the Field Hou c. Th· diamond Howard tuart, fourth in horizontal met.'b and tilt' haketball . quad md on _- orthrop Field is nol in condition bar: Carl Dech, third in horse; Che,ter Dc Paul III the regional Olympic trial becaue of the late '/lOW anrl tlH' • Tel on, econd in ring; Decb, fourth in hicago. For the firl time in ev­ ratm,. on ring-; Dean hawbold, fir t in eral . ea.·ons the lJru;eball ~quad trav­ parallel bar; Paul Johnson, tied for elled south on a .pring training trip .econd on parallel bar~. Letter Jf'inners and played games with outhern ::\1innesota'" lZymnastic for tun e .' schook Letter ha\'e heen awarded to 55 reached their Ilight',t peak of tbe la-t Bernie Bierman ha - a football squad rniHr ity of ~linne . ota athletes wbo 10 year- "hell (~eorge )Iati."on won of more than i.5 members of whom participateJ in the 6\'e winter inter­ ~eco~l(l plaet' in the ea-tern intercolle­ 'ollle JJ players are lettermen, re erves collegiate porb. giate all-around ('olllpetition la.t week­ anel promising performer from the end. ::\Iati,oll and tllT"e other member. freshman team. During tbe pring Letter winner folIo\\': of tbe champion,hip Gopher gym team, drill. ther' \\ ill be much intere. t in tbe Hockey-From Minneapoli.: George Mitchell. Dean ... hall hold, Paul John:on ant! c\evt'lopment of the~e first year men Edward Arnold, Ridgway Baker, Frank Berry, het _Tel_on, repre,enttd ~1inne .. ota in ror t hl'j \\ ill be ('alled upon a replace­ Reynold Bjorck. WiUiam C. Bredesen. Roger Brude, James E. Carlson. Robert L. Carlson, lhe en tern intercollegiate meet at nH'uts dUring the 1936 ,ea on. John Ganley. B. Willi; Smith, Wall), Taft, Philadelphia this sea,on for the fir4 Charles Wllkinson, Richard Hunt~r (mana"er). lIen.' it i, 19:16 and the Gopher' From St. Paul-Joe Schwab. From outside time in \,cars. ~lali,on now rate, an ha ,'e nol heen ddeated on the gridiron the Twin Citie;-Richard Kroll, International excellent' chance of repre._enting the sillcc 19:1'2. The schedule for next fall Falls. Ba.. kethRll-From Minneapoli,: Earl Hal­ United tate, in the Olympic game is tOllgh from h 'ginning lo nd with vorson, Geor(l!'e N8:'oh ... lartin Rolek, GPOri!e thi: summer thl "\Iill1lt'.sotan tra"elling to Sl':1tlle Ro;coe. From St. Paul-Rnhert Manly, for thc intl'r'il'dion,ll clash \\ ith a CharI"" Wallblom. R. Elwood Baker (man­ a~erL From out..... ide the Twin ilit;'~-Jamcs trong ' Ya hington tl'am on .'cpll'mher Raker. Glenn Barnum. Glencoe ~ :!'lah:olm Conferellce Title 'l6. Thi \\111 be a real tl'~t ror the Eiken. Caledonia: G..orlo n. Willard Morri" from the " ·i... consin tt'am by a 'core of I e mi"in~ "ul'h star., ,Is Glenn "l'itlcl. Erne,t Nymen. Waldron Jerome. W""ley Webb. Georg(' Rt"l:Ol, Bahc LI:'Y(111'. ,hddon Frum "t. Paul-Au~tin parJinJt. From out­ 1.36-2 to 1,3 1-1111-t "l'l"k Bei e, ':\lal Eik 'n and Gorge Renni:x ~ide the Twin Citics- ndrew Ackerman. Detroit. Mich.: Walter Gjelhaug. n~udette: Roberl ... andagl'r a"ain led the ~Iin­ Thes men wi ll bc v~ry hard to replace. R~xford Hudsun, Milan J

Tbe ~IINN ESOT A For a time however it may be subject to cerLain checks and balanc ' . Various military groups will consider it a flippant organization while the regular peace societies will hold it in slLspicion. A a malleI' ALUMNI '8WEEKLY of fact lhe Future Vet ran might have continued as a local Princelon club had not the attack of out­ .iclers calle I it Lo the aLtention of tud nt in all part Published by of Lhe cou nlry. Now there are chapters of the The General Alumni Association of the Veterans of Future War on more than fifty campu e with a chapter being formed thi· week at the Univer~ i ty of l\Iinne ota. WILLIAM S. GmsoN, '27, Editor and Business Manager LORAlNE SKINNER '36, A ••istant Editor HERE is th tory of a man who went to college T for fiv year in the hope of increasing hi earn­ Vol. 35 April 4, 1936 No, 25 ing capacity so that he might have the lei ure time in which lo pick up an ducation. The attitude Issued on Saturday of each week during the regular session, from which thi ligget \\'0. cor d la t week in an addres September to June, and monthly during July and August. Entered as second class matter at the post office at . Minnesota. by William Allen ' Vhite, lhe noted Kansa editor. Life subscription with life membership in the General Alumni Asso­ ciation are $60. Yearly subscriptions are $9. Subscribe with central office It has been the subject of much discu ion fo), year or local secretaries. Office on the campus is 118 Administration Building. of cour e but the eminent and emphatic Emporia Telephone: Main 8177. journali t was unequivocal in hi crilici, Ill. not onl~' OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS of this attitu Ie on the part of the • Ludent , hut ORREN E. SAFFORD. '10L .. Pre.ide"t ...... _ ...... _ .... _ .... Minneapolis of the educaLional policies pur ued by colleges ERLrNG S. PLATOU. '20Md. Vice-President.. .. _...... _Minneapolis TROS. F. WALLACE, '93, '96L, Tr.ll8uTer...... _...... _ .... Minneapolis and universilie which. he conL nd . serve lo en­ E. B . PlERCE. '04, Executi"e Secretarll ...... _...... _...... _ .... _.... St. Paul courage the attitu Ie. He could of cour. e go farlher a nd truce the mate­ rial acqui. itiv nes back to the oci Ly in which the NEWS and VIEWS sludent is li ving. The de ire for wealth before culture i" not .omething peculiar to the pre enL generation IlE formation by a group of tudent at Princelull of college student. The acqui. ition of material a­ T University of an organization called the "VeLer­ seL bring, e urity, and the appr balton of .ociety an of Future ''Val'S'' reveal evidence of a sense of from Lhe uccess standpoint. Then with financial humor in a generation of college . tudenl. noled for independence assured the individual who i so in­ its inten e eriou ness. The group !'ugge t in ils clined may giv some LhoughL to hi cultural develop­ announcement of aim and purposes Lhat a petition ment. be . ent to congre s requesting the payment of one This implies lbal educaLion of the more advanced Lhousand dollar to each mem her, due in 1965, bu t sort is a luxury which mu t be con idere 1 aparL from payable immediately. In upport of this req\lC L Lhe lhe everyday bu ine. of living. Or in a broader sense organization advances the argument that noL onl~' that education which is clas~ified a. lJeing pracliraJ will su h a distribution of funds hurry the return of or useful mu:>l come before the lype of educaLional prosperity but it will also enable the rccipients to effort which de"elop~ lhe appreciation for cuI Lural enjoy the money before they risk Lheir lives in fuLure lhings and open the minLl lo new advenlures in the wars. realm of though t and understanding, This ha' In Rpite of the fact that lhis studenL group may broughl abolIll11any change in Lbe program of liberal hal'e heen formed in a spiriL of jest. lhe movemenl education and has a Ivanc d the trend low.U'd ~pe­ has a significancc and a . erioll ness which are hidden cializalion in Lhe universitie . from view aL fir t glance by the . a.tiric Louch 0f Lhc Far ighLed educator. hay criLicized thi empha i request for payments. The ingenuolls liUc has pro­ on special iza lion just n sOllnclly as has Mr. White. phetic implications which may well inspire more ... peeializat ion in ilsell' is necessary in the training of thinking on war allel peace lhan all the fille huL I s leader~ in the varioLl profe sion but the. e men will colorful slogan of Lhe many . Ludcnt peace sncietie . be beLLer qualified as lacier if Lhey posse_s a back­ The appeal i more specific. The futlll'e veteran Ill;)Y grollnd of gcncral knowledge. Something i lacking picllll'e in his mind 'ome of the inilialion ])J'oced\ll'e in the program which limits the aclive curio iLy of through which he must go in order lo qua lify 1'01' lhc studcnL Lo one lHI.ITO\\- field. And Lh . Ludcnt the title of veteran of past wars. If such an orgnniza­ who fails Lo Lake aelva ntage of the opporLunity for tion should actually develop a program \\'11 i h would lhe development of diverse inler L is disrerral'dillg assi. tiL members in picturing the desolalion and lIse­ Olle of lhe chi f aims of education. lessness of human warfare it mighL Lruly be an in­ fluence in the interest of peace. IlE .;a111e of foolball returns lo lil alLention of There is alway the danger, tno, Lha t if sllch a T III follow J" ot athlcLic. with Lhe opening of the group should develop an impressive membership it spring training period. Even those individuals who migh t be taken over by Oll tide .i n Leresl.s who could are not parli 'ularly concem d wilh any form of use it for the pUl'pose of furtherlllg their own eJ1

The Reviewing Stand w. s. G.

III the News he became an agent with the :\futual Benefit Life In uranee Company, mak­ RVILLE II LEBEN '29, is ing an out tanding record a a per onal A the new president of the Milwau­ producer. In 1924 be became Organ­ kee Pre s lub, and is editing tbe izer with tbe Tew York Life Insurance club' 1936 yearbook entitled "Once a Company and became Agency Director Year." Pre\'iouly he ha erved as in 1928, wbieb position he now holds. vice president and director of the or­ He has seen World War service and iume his new dutie ' on :\Ia~ ] . tion in the summer of 1934 \\ hen he l1es.• \.dmini tration. Ill' \ILl awarded \\ a, \\'ith the IIomeslake :\Iining om­ the hartered Lif ndeTlYl'iter' degree ITe pra'ticclI for t\yO ~'Car. iu l\Iinot. ~. D ., winning a fl'llowship at thc pany at Lead, ' . D . While i~ )lin­ h~ ' the A1neri an ollege of Life Un­ :;Uo\,o Foundation. Roche, ter. :i\linn .. neapolis thi · winter 'Yoodward "i~ited derwriter in 1933. wh~r(' hl' eOlllpletl'll th usual four­ \\·ith his father. Ikrhert . Woodward .\.£ter graduating from Ilan'ard he and-a-hal£-\,cnr ~... ork on his D ctor of 'OiL. of ~516 (,olfa\. .\.wnue South. nnd spent eighlet'll lI10nths with IIl\l'stmcut Philos0phr' lkgree in three years. did rc~earch lind ot 11l'f \\ ork in the Runkel'S in It-\'l~land, Ohio. In l!l'23 IIc Idt the foundation 1<) bl'l' OI1H.' as- Sehool of )lines at the l'nin.'rsity. 43S THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

Minnesota Songs liE IIlIlsic and u'orc/8 of the T l'tT.~C a.y IN'/I as the rl/(lTu8 of "Tltc P. of M. RouseT" appeaT ill the IIC(I) edition of So ' CoS or , m: ECAUSE she was a delegate to the burg, cou. in of th' hride, and Mrs. l'''I\'[o,HSITY 01' :\I,r.;:o;r_-;nl public library building However, in spilt' of the 1<1('1;: of 11 (Charlotte Boute)]), Mrs. Rillph H. was heing fillishcd whl'n I was in my brnry school training, certain factors Boos (Evelyn Boutell) and Kappa la~t college year. I \\l'nl 011 the ~lI1aIl counterbalanced la('k of spl'ci:dil('(1 Kappa Gamma sister l\larion Sanders stall' \\ ithollt previous lraining, hill leaching, she thinks. were bridal attendants, Warren Berkey gradually work(>d lip through yariUll~ ",\ p r50nal acquainlanee \\ith p,n· and AndrelV H. Justus, ushers. A string departments to the head." fl'ssors . . . and no instruct ors. Wl' trio from the Minneapolis Symphony With lhe forty-sixlll birthday of llw had the head profc~sor in thost' ('arly orchestra played nuptial music. Mary :\Iilll1l'ap()li~ Pli hlic Li brnry Oil Decem­ days, an advantage I would lIut (,., Magaw wa out-oI-town gue. t. ber Hi of this year, and her thirl)­ rhange [or many of the laln adnln­ ealllc was thc deslinatioll of Mil­ second year as chief librarian, 1\1is, tag'C'~.JJ dred Cook and <\Jlyn P. Stillman, mar­ Counlry~lan annolillcl'd more change, Profe, sors particularly deeply n'­ ried March 9 at the Walter IT. ewlon indicalive of furl hrr grcm th of til li­ membered .. "Dr. VohH'11, Profl'" home in Minnrupolis. Wan'('n lIam- brary service. 'ol olll" would hooks ,or Illllrhinson, and Prof\,ssor • (/('h· ·\.pRIL i, 1936 439 trieb .. , and :\Iiss unford, and, of account of the f)'JIlI!! co,t of living! COUfse, President ~orlhr()p, to whom And what i more cerlain than inflation lowe the beginning of my career ... Letters under a pro,(Uam of unproductive yt·., and the continuing ycars ill it." squandering coupled with the compul­ .\~ for stud{'nl friellrlships she says, sory administration of econl)mic nos­ "I believe most of my closer friends ECOIlOmics trums which deliherately cllrh produc­ lire cullegt' malc ." tion in the face of actual economic Picture Miss Countryman, who sits Dcar Edilor: need? Is it not alJUnrlance that main­ hehind the library counter, handing out The WEEKLY has been enlin'ned for tains the Pllrehasing power of money? books or advisillg those who wish to me coruiderably by its recent entrance The profe. .,or shuuld h:lye aid that learn about aviatiun, Ibsen. and \\ hat inlo the field of economic,> through pro­ ..\.L\. was i1ltended. not "deigned:' to not, a a girl in the navy-blue uniform fe ~orial articles. The writer has, in­ promote the interc"t, of azriculture. of Company Q. Or a' a student in del:'rl, pilled hi sentiment. on this al­ Crop incomes ha\'e actually bepn rf'­ an otherwise all-hoy surveying class, ready in another letter. Your willing­ duced by thi ... ,carcity program, despite carrying chain and takes about the nc,. to print oppo,ing I'iew.:-an ex­ higher pricl's. with reduction in pur­ CJlmp US on pring days. The perf!'ct cccdingly ncce-~ary procl'rlure in the chasing power that only the proce_,in,!!! • pring quarter subject, surely,. he prestllt late of affair . -i~ commend­ tax "benefits" could neutralize-and thought it quite a lark. abll'. the~e were at the expense of a Peter­ ~ow a well-known pacifH. Mis' Professor chmidt's analV'is of old robbing process that also cut total pur­ Countryman was quite active in the age peru ion' i. good in it, excellent chasing power through the cost of "troop well-known as the pride of the criticism-the be t I ha\'e secn--of the bureaucracy. 'U'," the girls' Company Q, which Town end economic-tail-cha. ing Plan. Is there not also ,omething mislead­ drilled in the olJ Coliseum unJer Lieu­ But it does seem to me that most of ing in the tatistical review of our in­ tenant Glenn, but she aLo haJ a hand the fallacies in this plan exi t only in crea ed longe,-ity? Are we reallv in anything literary. Oratorical con­ less'T dcgree in all thi "ocial .ecuri­ hara .ed by a problem in helple",ne;­ te. ts. the old Hermean Literary ociety ty" legislation. The .e attempts to that did not exi t before this expec­ were among ht'r undergraduate activ­ treat lite ymptoms in tead of the tancy in life developed? Is the pro­ ities. he was also a member of Delta banking di. ease of OUI capitallSM, by portion of tho. e who are unprorluctil'e­ Gamma. Upon graduation he was robhing Peter to pay Paul, seem to me Iy old, as compared with the produc­ elected to Phi Beta Kappa. the logical outgrowth of the fallacies tive population, a. much greater than "}lemorie. Aoat up to the top \\hen of the yelocity theory of commercial it wa a the e figure" make it seem? bank "credit" pyramiding. If thi Y. ­ Finally, we ought to pau.e a mo­ my thoughts go back to 0 many pro­ tt'1ll of "lending" i proper and wo~k­ ment to consider the virtue" of con­ fc"ors und classmates," ,he ~ays. ahh', then all the other good inten­ stitutional goyernment "lIen we hal'e ''There were no dormitoril' . . no ch~p­ taken the trouble to ~it doll'll and work ter houses, ':\ly o\\'n home was a tions that pave the road to the hell of center where students. sororily melll­ inAation and deflation are al ... o "ound! ?u.t a feasible set of rule' for the game. It 10 wo~ . e than illy to ... ug!; "t change:; brrs anc! classmates dropped i~," The trouble i. that in changing by offiCials while the game is in pro­ CommenCeJl1t'llt Day h(' was onr of thrift from a voluntary to an im'olun­ gre s. tates or no ,tate", there can 26 in the cln" of the last small tar,\' procedure we inlply prevent nor­ 'bD. be no uch thing a ... con-titutional go\'­ c1a<. Fortv-thft'e years lal!'r in ]930 mal procl'durc in inve tment and for­ er~ent legislation may proceed. un­ hl' was to' TI.'cl·i,·r· from the Uniycr­ mation of capital. We merely ;;terilize if brIdled. by the artIe device of declar­ ity of ,\[innpsota an honorary ma ter'. a certain sum in a bookkeepi~g gesture \\ hich ,olve. no problcm whatcyer. ing it to be "for the general welfarl'." ur!:fl'p in recognition of her' outstand- Bc:

chairman. county attorney from 1911 March R. For nine years he had been * * * * to 1918, and well-known conservation­ emplo) cd h~ ' the de'partmenl of puh­ i t, died March ] 7 at his home. lic works at Winnipeg. ~up rinlendin~ Brief Notes About Born at Paynesville, Minn., he was the mechanical and electrical conslruc­ graduated from Mankato high chool, tion of all inslilutional buildings. Born Minnesota Alumni and then entered the law chool of the near IUinn ilpolis. :\finn .. 55 years ago, 12,000 Minnesotans read this de­ niver ity of Iinnesota. He had been he IVa graduated from the niver"ity partment each weel, for news of as an electrical engineer, and in 19] 9 friends of ollege days. a prominent lawyer of Mankato for many years. wa married. lIe i survived by his A a gentleman farmer, he main­ wife and a son, Roger. Burial was at 1886 tained the George Washington farm at Dauphin. Dr. 'OS and frs. Gu tave A. Hag­ Frank N. Crosby '86Ex, New York Lake Washington. lIe was a staunch supporter of con ervation of wild life berg of Iinneapoli celebrated t. Pat­ attorney, died Monday, March 9, at and a leader of the game reerve move­ rick' holiday in their new home at Bridgeport, onn. He was born at ment in outhern Minneota. 4410 unny ide road, Minneapoh,. Hastings, Minn., son of Judge Frank He i urvived by hi widow, three They formerly lived at 4633 Drexel Marion Crosby. After graduating from daughter , one . on and a brother, Dr. avenue. the University of Minnesota, he prac­ Aaron F. ehmltt '99Ex of Minne­ ticed law at Duluth, Detroit, and apolis. 1909 Hastings, {inn., before going to New York about ]S years ago. Surviving Mr. '09L and Ir. I. ~I. Hud on him are his wife and two sisters Mr ' 1902 (Margarethe Denfield 'OS) of Ben on, Edward Pre cott of Tacoma, \Vah.: l\iinn., returned recently from a .ix· ::\10. e' Winthrop '02Ex, Minneapoli and Ii s Marion Crosby of l\Iinne­ week trip to California. They viSIted politician and lawyer, died March 5 apoli. in Pasadena, Los Angele~. a~d Oak in Swedi-h hospital. Mr. Winthrop, land whcre they saw a daughter, ~Iar 1894 who was 57 year- old, came to this garet, attending Mills College, and a country from Rus ia Hi years ago. He Dr. '9iD and 1\1rs. Thomas B. son, Robert. in busine s in 'an Fran­ was educated in the ::\1inncapoli pub­ cisco. Hartzell of ::\linneapolis will return lhe lic school, at the Univer 'ity and in latter part of April from Palo ,\Ito, variolls law office~ of the city. 1910 Calif., where they left to visit their He was a supporter of the late en­ son-in-law and daughter, ::\11". and 1\11". ator Thoma D . chall, and had taken ::\1r. '101\1 aud Mr .. Krllnrth Duncan 'Valter everson. part in several campaign. lIe was (France oIlier 'HI) of Wakefield, deputy insurance cOlllmis-ioller over .Mich ., are vacationing al ::\1illllli Beach, 1896 20 years ago. He is , urvivcd by his Fla., away from l\Ir. Duncan's job a Hiram Earl Ros '96, 63 years old. wife, a son, and a daughlcr. sup<'rintcnelenl for Piekand., .:\Iath,·r vice president and lreasure'r of the and Compall), of tIl ' PI~molllh minI' at W'lkdlelrl and the _ \nYil-PalJ1)~ - K, '.·­ H. W. Ro s Lumber company or ~1in­ 1904 neapoli , died Thursday. \Iareh 1'1. at \\('I'IW\\ mine al Bl'. sClllcr. :'Ili. h. his home in Iinneapoli,. Born in :\1il­ Jame ~ Edward :\1rhan '01. '06L, al ::\Ir. '10 and ::\lr. James E. Dor c\" waukee, he mo\'ed to ::\1inneapolis. al­ the time of his death \'ice president and (::\1ary Lon'lla Toomry '09) It,rt tended the l'niverslty, and joilll'd manager of the Fruen ~1illillg COUl­ :\Iarc'h 21 to join lIH'ir daughter, Jane Delta psi Ion fraternity He also bc­ pany, died ~IHreh 13 at th age of 67 Dorsey. stud nt at Radcliffe colll·g.-, longed to the l\1inneapolis and :\Iini­ years. in :\Iinneapoli·. and their son. John Dorsey, memher of kahda clubs. IIl"viving are three. ons Mr. Mehan wa. horn in :\Iechanics­ the fre . hman cia" at Haryard uninr­ in 1\1inneapoli . ville, N. Y., and came in 1890 to St. ~ily. ::\1r. t1l1d ~Ir -. Dorse} thl'n Paul to take charge of Lhe we -tern plnllllcd to 1('11 Y(, on a cruise to Bl'r­ 1898 hranch of Geor~e Barrie and Son, muda during HadcliJTe and I1arnlrd Philadelphia pllbli~hers. While here, spring ,·acalions. 1\11'. '9S and Irs. M. A. Lehman of hc attended the niver ity of linne­ Minneapolis sailed recently for a crui'e sota law school. receiving a degree in to California by way of lhe Panama 'Oland a ma~ter of laws degrec in 1913 Canal. They will visit in Los An~ele . '06. ?lJ rs. Alfr d O"re (Franc 'harIoltr Mr. '!HEx and Mrs. Vernon T . Pear­ He \\"a an alderman of the thirteenth son (::\Iaxine Lehman) of Duluth.on­ Hockenbcrger '13) open an office for ward in 1011 for Minneapolis. , urviv­ thc rcyi'ion, editing, proofreading. and in-law and daughter of 1\1r. and Mrs. ing are his widow and five brothers. Lehman, will visit the Lehmans Easter typing of manllscripts . . . transla­ upon their return from Cali fornia. tion', literary and historical re~ear('h . 1907 and preparalion of arlicles from not.'s 1899 .. aL Hi East '23 d street, ew Yurk apolcon A. L'JIerault '07L, prac­ ity. ])1'. '09::\1d ami l\Ir . Jcnnings C. ticing attorncy for 2G y'ar' and a for­ Litzenberg (Dr. Olga Hansen ' 15::\1<1), mer state senator from the twcnty­ 1918 who saw the Mardi Gras fell' and eighlh eli trict of Minnesota, died spent some time in Florida, returned Wedne day vening, March IS, in iin­ Dr. Harold •. Diehl 'ISl\ld, '2I(;r. to Minneapoli from Kansas City, neapolis. He \Va. born at Fall River dean of medical sciences. left for the wllere they had stopped after attend­ Ias ., 53 ycars ago, but has been a we t La ludy mcthods of public health ing . everal medical meeting- en roule resident of Minneapolis for 52 years. teaching at tall ford university und the home. Univer ity of alifornia. Itt B'rkrll') 1908 and its medical chuol at an Francisco 1900 lIe rec ived a travel grant to makt' John W. Schmitt 'oOL of Mankato, George Brown 'OSE, town engineer the e studies from the Hock('fl,BI'r Minn., who WH~ board of educatioll for Dauphin, Mall., died thrr(' SlInday, foundation. \PIlIL 1, 1936 441

J \ldge Paul . Carroll '18, senior Judge of the :\Ii nneapolis :\lunicipal Alumni To Greet Friends in Minnesota Courl, fill's a~ ('andidate for the di,­ lriel bench. R. '99 and Mrs. G. Sidney Phelps (Mary Ward '98) who for .35 M years hat'e resided at Tokyo where Jlr. PheLps u'a/t executzve 1920 secretary of the Y.M.CA. in Japan, will be in Minneapolis for ten days a~ gll~ts of Dr. '02Md and Mrs. Stephen Henry Baxter (Laura Jfae Dr. J. A. ;\lyers '20~ld, speciali"t in Robb '03), arrit'ing April 11. They will come from Clearwater, Fla ., tuberculosis at tbe tudellt' Health uhere they have been wintering on their way to Ilartford, Conn. Jirs. Service, left for the west coat the la't Phelps lcill pay her first visit to the Twin Citi~ in 25 years. of March to gi ve several lecture~ he­ .Ifr. PheLps, uJw has retired from the international committee of the fore merucal gatherings. April 2 h(~ addressed the California Tuberculosis Y.M.C ..!. and sen ice in Japan, i" to be connected uith the perma~t association and the following day ad­ staff of the Bureau of Cnit-ersity Tra,,:el,. Har:ford, Conn.: as a.'fsoCtate dirertor of Oriental tours. The orgamzatlon an educatumal founda­ dre,~ ed members of the Oregon Tub~r­ 1" culosis society in Portland. tion for promoting the understa.nding of foreign cul~ures chie~y through He will top April 6 on hi return personally led tours. JIr Phelps uill head the Onental semmar tours, trip to peak before the Nebra ka taking the first group next October. Tuberculosi a sociatioll in Lincoln. Mrs. Baxter informed the Alumni Weekly of their coming visit. s.o From there he will return to resume his that their many Twin City friend" might hat.'e an opportunty to t.'l.'I1t practice in Minneapolis and his work them during their stay. The Baxter home is at 2307 Colfax at'ellue . on the campus.

1921 on the :\li i sippi river at Genoa, 1927 Wis. Dr. F. V. Betlach '21D head' the Dr. Yerner Paul Johnson '~ nld, local ommercial organization in Owa­ 1924 phy ician at Delano, Minn., rued tonna, :\linn.. the Owatonna .\socia­ .:\Iarch 1 at Fairview ho pital, ~linne­ tion, during the coming year. ~lr . '2!L and :\lr;;. '''endell O. a polis. He had practiced at Delano Roger of Holdridge, Lake :\linnetonka. for the laot nine year. and wa' pre'i­ 1922 :\linn., announce the birth of a baby dent of Wright County )ledical ociety. daughter on unday. :;\lareh 15. uryi\.;ng him are his "ife and two Yi vian Grace Gib, on '22 of Sl. Paul, Edward Gay lark. Jr., ".,21 ••-\lpha son", Robert Paul and George Burton. :\.linD" pa t pre-idcnt of the t. Paul Delta Phi, m~ried Jane herman of His parent are ~1r . and :\lr . Charles Bu ine and Profe sional Women' Ne" York, member of the Denihawn E. John on of Minneapolis. club, took charg· of the tenth annual dancer on their tour to the Orient, in Dr. Jay Conger Da\"i '~7hld, cardi­ ob, ervance of national bu. ine wom­ a weddin" at the church of the Tran;,­ ologi t, announces removal of his of­ en's week in t. Paul. peakers at figuration, 'ew York City. lr. Clark fice to 905 Medical Art building, the "Bllsines, .L sociate " dinner l\larch al 0 belong to the Tew York Ath­ Minneapoli , for the practice of carru­ ':?l wer :\lrs. Olivia John 'on '07Ex, letic club and the ni\'ersity club of ology and electrocardiography. president of the linneota Federation leveland. The bride ha danced with Dee J. Poole \n i doing newspaper of Busine and Profes ional Women' the Doris Humphrey group and in a work in the tate of Bonfils and Tam­ club, and Harold II. Henderson, ex­ Theater Guild production. and recent­ men, reporting on the Greeley Daily secretary of the ;\linne ota In titute ly'pent three year' tudying \'oice Tribune, Greeley, Colo. of Government. and language in Pari . Dr. !.. Tuve '22EE, of the de­ :\lr. and :\Ir. lark end" ,\t home" 1928 partment of terrestrial magneti m in card from ~3 utton place outh, Te w Carnegie in tilute, is one of three to York City. Richard :\1. Drake .~ Ed, instructor ha\'(' develop d a new method of ex­ at University high chool, and three ploring the upper atmo 'phere by light. 1925 graduate studenL in the college of With Dr. A. E . John on of arnegie education were amon" the fifteen men and Dr ..\ . O. Wulf of the department Dr. Raymond B. Allen '~5Gr, who elected to member-hip of Phi Delta of chemistn of soil, in the L . . de­ ha· been ~s oeiate dean of the :;\ledical Kappa. national honorary education partment or agriculturc. they have de­ chool at olumbia Univer~ity, has fraternity. The three graduate tu­ veloped "fingerprinled light" hot into ju t received the appointment ;f dean dent are Donald E. Hargi', acra­ the air which help l'xplore the upper oC the Detroit ollege of ~ledicine . Hi~ mento, Calif; Herbert Iver'on, • apa. regions and make, po, sible the • tudy nomination \\'a' approved recently by alif.; and Raymond A. Kehl. :\lil­ of the varying densily of the air at the Detroit board of education. waukee. high altitude. and the po .~i ble efl'ect~ William Loui Kelly III '25L. who Other' were eniors in the college of of wind velocity, dll t, water vapor, and education. turbulence oC the \\ eatlJ('r near the wa a ... t. Paul lawye; and arti"t. died ea rth. unday, larch 22, at Aneker hospital AIember are elected on the basi following an illne.s of almo t two years. of cholar_hip, profes, ional promi e, or 1923 He was a. grand on of the late William demon-trated teaching sucees . Louis Kelly. judge in Ramsey county Dr. Hah'or O. IIah'orson .~ Gr. as- Mr. '23Ex and ~lrs. Herbert E. di-trict court for 36 year" nnd the ociate profe or of bacteriology, .poke Och,l\el' (Ardi an '';25Ed) are no" ninth uccessive generation of hi ram­ to citizen of Northfield. :;\linn., recent­ making their home in Atlanta, Ga., ily to practice law. Ele\'en years ago lyon the modern method of .sewage wheft· 1\11'. 0 hsner is ollnl'cted with he entered practice \\;th his father, and disp0S<'l1 which he has \\ orked out af­ the United tales ForL' ·try ~erviee. served for 'everal y€'nrs as st'cretarv ter three year of research. Julian II. Levy '':?:l I i now sla­ of night cla. se. at the t. Paul chool TIe bas found a method of impro\lng tioned a, contra~tors' engineer during of art. ,urviving ar hL rather. two filtering ten-Cold and of cutting the the ('on~truction or a ~overnment dam si , t('r, Ilnd a brother. co~t of 'ewage planb \0 per cent. 442 THE M lNNE OTA ALUMNI W EEKLY

June 25 and 26 he will leclure on William T. H an'i '32, staIf J11l'll\ll<' the same subject at Philadelphia. of the ,Mankato Free Pres, announce Faeulty Profiles that his small on i the fourth ill th,' 1930 family lo carry "the full and auspiciou, title of William T. Harris." Dr. 'SOD and Mrs. Glen A'hley F LEEING c. .. rmaJ1~ · July 81. 191~ , in a Elinor Healh ':3~Erl Jlaudle credit peasant's cart b ,fore th .. drive on BI.'I­ (AuIHt :\Iay 'SOEx) of Scranton, T. D., details of ardozo 13ros, Inc., St. Paul. gium was the fun-ill-ft'trosp('d r xperit'llci! of attended the :\Iinnesota statc dt>ntal Profes,;or Ifrl.'c\ L- Burt, "Ito in Burton teve Gailler '3'!E, who ha been convention in St. Paul February 2S-7. auditorium, enliv('lIs English hi torl be­ with the oil conservation erviee III Dr. Ashley is practicing dentistry in yond nece,sity of battll',hip playing or the department of agriculture at 13ag­ Scranton. They have a 28 month old Daily reading for diverSion .\nd who ofT­ ley, 1Iinn., and :Mrs. Gadler (Idella son adopted two years ago. ,lage is a m'I\"IY, philosophic - appearing Kroona) will make their home at t. Mary Ella McAllister 'SOEd, teach­ person se~n without his pipe Johnsbury, Vt., where .:\11'. Gadler ha ing history at Tower, Minn ., a k that It was while it studenl al the Univer~itv r('r ived a position with Fairbanl ', her address be broadca t. She'd like of Brcis'lua, Barlen, thul he received wor;1 Morse Co. to have orne of the :\1inne otans of her to lean' imlllediutd~' Other foreigners had cyu('uakd week_ before. The army :\Iargaret Tufty 'S2 claim the title class write to her. sOOIl kidnaped [OJ' thdr own u e hi train of head lechnician al the :\Iiller ho. pi. Maynard M . tephens 'SO, 'SIGr, is to Bruss(':s thus his e -~ape by carl. tal, Duluth, Minn. teaching geology at the State College lIe arriwd safcly in England. . but Mr. and :\lr -. Harold .:\loxril" of Pennsylvania. hungrl', and quitt warrlrobl-Ic", IIis bag­ (Pauline IInningham 'S'2) make their Margaret A. Skinner '30Ed U, pres­ gage had been It'lt Oil the lrain. no kind home in th' borderline ('ity or Inll'r- ident of the grade teachers' seclion of soldier had thought to toss it out. national Falls, Minn. . the Minneapolis Teacher' League, will TIe was scholarship student in s('ience to Bernard Wambolt '3'2 formerly with Toronto Hniversitv 'IOBA; went as Rhodes be consultant ex officio for the eduC'a­ cholar to Oxford '1 ':!B.\, 16,\1 \ . In '13 the PlaillYiew e\\s, i: assistant adn·r· tional policies commls IOn of the he was appointe.) hislory b·turer at the ti ing manager of the YanktOl' Prps N.E.A., sayan official bulletin from Uniwrsity of Albt'rta. and Dakotan. IIi ' 1>0' i,s cia "mate that organization. Purpose of the War intemlptt!d his first years, GO T ~ trand Hilleboe commis ion is to develop long - range adjutant at ,\Ihl rta, 11(> wus rejected as (; n . \Ic\Tillan ':l'2E has I)('en Illl planning for improvement of American a prh'ate, but formed hi own tank com­ Iowa. f('sident sinee ,-O\-embcr, 19S3 school. pan." from ,tudenb anti fril'nds, becoming when he became enior engine('r WIth Mr. Robert Rasche (fary Mar­ Lheir captain Company'. orders to report thc _oil consl'nation s('f\'ice at idney, garet Burnap 'SO) is now living at to the front were dat"d o\t'mber 11 , 1918 Ia. He drov(' to Tehraka to see the He returned to Alberta anrI became h~ad Northfield, Minn., where Rev. Rascht>, of the bistory department in 1920. Tbe Golden Gophers at Lincoln last fall , a ongregational minisler, ha recent­ next year he begnn "Thr Old Province of Ir. '3'2E and Mrs, Lloyd B. Knut­ ly accepted a pulpit as pa tor of the Quebec," published in 1933 ummers he sen (Joyc(' utting 'SlEd) are 111m Congregational - Baptist church of spent in Ottawa collecling material living at S500 Dupont avr11ue ~ .. \1111 Northfield. In 1980 he ldt the University of AI­ neapoli '. f r. Knulsen i - a grnduatr Seval Soren on 'SOM is an engineer berLa, after 16 years, to become professor of th college of arr'hiteeture, ;\Ir . with the U. S. department of agricul­ of history here. Knutsen of musiC' school. ture at Bagley, Minn. Cherrie Overby '30Ed tells pupils to 1933 open up their waler-color boxes in the nician with the Cobb clinic, St. Paul. South St. Paul public schools. Doris yrc '~H has been 11's. Al­ Win. ton Elkins 'S3, 'S5Gr is the fLh Eva Cox '30Ed is now Irs. laude fred Kittleson ~inee July. Mr. and and game speciali t for the Chequame­ Lundqui t of LeMars, la. ]l.11's. Kittleson are making their home gon national forest, Park Fall, Wis. aomi Swayze '30Ed, teacher of mu­ in Reeder, N. D . Lieutenant Edward Gadler 'S3Ex I sic in tile Duluth public schools, was Mr. 'S1 and ~lrs. William Roberts commanding officer at the C.C.C. camp a guest over New Year holidays of (Belinda Blackseth '30Ed) of Spokane, at Savannah, Mo., and la t eptelllb('r Mrs. Kenneth Ingwalon (Katherine Wash., are the parents of a mall married a graduate of the University Lewis 'SlAg) of St. Paul. daughter. of Missouri. Elsie Traulman 'SI \g is principal Margaret E llen Bryan '3S of Red and head of thl' home economic, de­ Wing and a member of A. O. Pi, ha, 1931 partment at th Elkton, S. D .. high chosen thi spring for her marriage to school. Raymond E. Bamps of Detroit, an Kenneth Ingwalson 'SlAg, a stale Mr. '31 and ':\lrs. William Mears supervisor of 4-H club work in Min­ alumnu of the Univcr, ity of 1iehigan. (Virginia heely '~l) have ju t com­ Helell :Iarie Clausen 'SSGr, rhl nesota, who received his Ph.D. a few pleted a new home, Cape rod archi­ years ago in plant pathology, and Mrs. Om ga Pi, and Jamcs L. Jaeek '36 tecture, on the Dodd Hoad, south of Md, Phi Rho igma., pick the tradition­ Ingwalson (Katherine Lewis '~nAg), St. Paul, and moved into it witb their announce the birth of a son, Kenneth al month, June, foJ' lheir marriage. two children, William, ,Jr., and Marily. Miss lausen is a medical oc ial work· James, Jr., born on ,January 27. The Mr. '31B and frs. AlvaI' ixon Ingwalson family moved recently from er. Mr. Jneck wi ll graduate this June (Ida Rood '3IE(]) hav(' :1. thrir ad­ from mcdicin and start his inlcrn('­ Duluth to St. Paul. Mrs. Iugwalson dress 1208 Euelid str et N. W., Wah­ is a member of Phi Mll Alpha sorority. ship in l\[inneapolis whert> the couple ingtpn, D. C. Evelyn Russell '~IE, who learned all wi ll reside. about interior decorating as an undcr­ 1932 FI ta Ro" ling 'SSEd agair, leaches graduate, arrange displays and writes Latin and history in the ~ hannon, 0_, advertising for a Bozeman, Mont., de­ Dr. 'S2D and 1\1rs. Asher L. chmitt high schoo\. ' partment store. give their daughter, born Wednesday, William Baker '~l is in charge of 'larch ,~, til!' name of Judith Lee. Dr. 1934 the North and East St. Paul com­ Schmitt is engaged in the practice of munity papt'rs. dentistry at Bremen, Ind., so :l\faurice orman IIimle '3 t 11' has officl's ill Dorothy L. Smith 'SlMdT, IS terh- S. Mo(' 'S<:!L writes the W ekly. the cOlII'thotlse, l. Puu l, as director .\I'IHL t , 1936 443

for tlJ(' 'l. Paul and Ram ey coullty WP \ rC'cl'eational project. Last sum­ mer he edited the North t. Paul Courier and assi ted in starting th<' A New Course in Adult Education East ~l. Paul Comier. John 'laydon '3lC, Red Wing, i· ,till postmarking his leLler!; home SUMMER STUDY "~iaga ra Falls." lIe has been affiliated with the Carborundum company sine'" lao t fall. lIe i· a member of igma Chi fraternity . In Vacationland •\rnold Elkin '3 L \\ ilh the Trempea­ Enjoy the scenic beauties .lnd recreational delights of the I"nd of ten leau, Wi ., county relief department, thow'and lakes while studying next summer. :\I1nneapoli:; is the gateway battles country roads on hi round', to one of the. Tation's greate!;t summer playground", during the "pring thaw. Laurel and ':31, formerly of the Walker Pilot, has recci"ed ~ position with the :\Iinneapolis office of the • lYe,tern • ewspaper Fnion, Graduate Courses for Teachers 1935 with New Master's Degree for Course Work Only ::\Iaurice Johnson '33, ex-Gopher star, at the furmerly in charge of tIl(' ad"ertisll1g deparlment of the Northwestern ::\Iill­ UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA er, j, trmderred to the General ::\lill Kansa' itv office wherc he will be These cour;es include Adult Education, Biology, ChemIstry, Physics, R,lverti.ing ~cprcsentati\'e. Taking hi ~fathematics, Sociology, Child \Velfare, Industrial Education. Public place in the ::\Iinnea polis office i :'IIi 1- Healtb, Home Economics, Phy ical Education, Play Production, ~iusic ton B. Kihlstrum '35. 'ind many others. Full credit toward Baccalaureate or Advanced De­

Earl Kirm. er ':l5 is new spurh edi­ grees is given ior summer work in all courses. • T ew courses in the tor of thl" Winona Rt'puhhcan. General College. All departments, laboratories and re earch facilities nu. ct la \Iullen ':1,3E" IS wlntering in are open and at your ervlce during tbe ·ummer. California I>taying at Los Angele . R ichard 'cammon '35, campus politi­ cal figure during undergraduate days, and on of Dr. and i'l l'S. R. E. cam­ • mon, arrh'ed home in Minneapoli TWO TERMS :'IIa1'('1I '21 from a veal' of !!raduate work al th London ' chool or Econom­ June 15-July 25 ics. He is working for a drgree in po­ July 25-August 29 litical science. ...ailing for New lork from . Quthampton, England, on the ." :'II unhaltnn, hr aecompanit'll Har­ old Lasky, II ell known proCcs,or of Exceptional Advantages economic. a t the London chool 250 Selected Educators :'IIr. '35 and I rs. Robert L. l'pton Special Lecture. (Ruby J emmette Th mas '34) haw Playa and Excursions brcome the parent of a on, namet! George Thomas Upton, wriles hi, 600 Courses grandfather, D r. t . E. Thomas ·Ol:'lId. A Great Reference Library "We are planning to enter the young Advanced Degrees man in the :'I[e,Jical School clas, of Moderate Fees ';H," says Dr. Thomas. ":'III' .. Thoma" Low Living Costl formerly Ruby Zehntel' '002. II i,he to state t hat she is the maternal grand­ mother." A Suggestion . .. :\Iarian J ung ':16 will gi\'(' tourish tip on th- ,marIe t, most interestin~ You m a.y find it conv enient to enroll for the second term a.fter retnrning place in linneapoli a he join the f r om t he N ,E.A. Conven tion a.t P ortl nnd, Oregon . staff of the Iinneapolis Yi. ilor after WlIller-quart er grad uatioll. Joan Pel rson '3uEx, former music • ~tudent anti" iclcl er of lhe " iolin bow, Write for Complete Bulletin has a po. it ion in lllL' D ulu th WP \ or­ Direotor of S'IUIUIler Sen10n, ficl'. • hc was ua('k seeing campus Dept. Al fril'lllls just hefore spring \'Ilration. Clarc K enner '3iEx, in medical UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA school, " as killetl in an alltomohik, acrid" lI t la·t Septem ber in Mil waukee, Minneapolis, Minn. "I'. Hi s home wa at Bri tton. S. D . lIl' was a member of Phi hi fraternity. Financial Condition of The Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company December 31, 1935 Fifty-Sixth Annual Statement Assets Liabilities Cash ------$ 1,670,413.22 Reserves on Policies - - - $29,039,491.70 Bonds: Claim awaiting proof --- 190,905.86 United States Government $1,994,239.30 Reserved for unreported State, Canadian, Municipal - 6,023,129.61 claims - ---- 50,000.00 Railroad - - 2,581,310.93 Public Reserved for Taxes (payable Utilities -- 5,539,865.67 in 1936) ------185,200.00 Industrial and Miscel- Dividends for Policyholders - 1,345,092.21 laneous -- 268,912.12 16,407,457.63 Stocks ------1,666,835.64 Mortgage Loans : Interest paid in advance -- 141 ,070.26 City - -$2,297,646.07 Farm --- 952.005.82 3,249,651.89 Premiums paid in advance Loans to Policyholders -- 6.313,107.86 including Premium Deposit Real Estate (Inc!. Home Office Bldg.) - -- - - 2,548,020.37 Funds ------722,237.57 Real Estate Sold Under Contract ------503,441.42 Other Liabilities 27,181.12 Premiums (Net): Outstand­ ing or deferred, secured by Contingency Fund - - -- 500.000. Policy Reserves -- - - 1,199,470.06 Interest due and accrued and Surplus ------1,675,010.7 1 other admitted assets -- 317,791.34

Total ------$33,876,189.43 Total - $33,876,189.43

Company Growth Insurance Surplus and Dec.3l in Force Resources Contingency Funds 1919 $ 59,904,344 $ 6,988,179.88 $ 400,681.39 1924 107,153,798 12,594,366.70 1,143,323.10 1929 183,312,161 22,529,713.09 1,661,115.37 1934 191,973,147 31,167,556.84 2,056,849.01 1935 197,860,562 33,876,189.43 2,175,010.71 New Business (paid for) in 1935-$33,409,OOO-increase 11 % (Average all Companies estimated at 3%)

HIGHLIGHTS OF 1935 Insurance in Force increased -- $6,000,000 Assets increased ------$2,700,000 Surplus increased to ---- - $2,176,000 Payments to Policyholders and Beneficiaries ------$3,460,000 For Further Details Write for a Copy of Our 1935 Detailed Statement

"flwam ~ to dave ~ SAFEST CAR daP-:JPtOnetj can buy./ f!

What man do n't want hi famillJ to be one hundr d per cent safe during th ir motoring honr and at all tim ! FOR ECONOMICAL

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• SOLID STEEL one·piece TUIlRET TOP BODIE

• HIGH· OMPRE 10 VALVE-IN·lIEAD ENGI E You are ntitl d to ALL the e feature in lJonr n w ar; afe drivinC] * Available in JlfaSler Dc Luxe models demands their pr cnce; and lJou can get them, at low prices, onll] only. KnecwAcl;Ofl $20 additional. J in the n w 1936 Chevrolet. 0/ NEW MONEY·SAVING G. M. A. C. TIME Give 'Jour famillJ one of the e n w Ch vrol t and lJou will be 6/0 PAYMENT PLAN giving them the afe t motor car that mon lJ can bUlJ ! Compare Cltcvroler'J loU' deit\lerrti prices and low monthlx payments. CHEVROLET M TOR COMPA Y, DETROIT, l\UCIIIGAN ~k~~~ -~~

CHEVROLETA GENERAL MOTORS VALUE APRIL 11, 1936 THE PROV I NCES OF FRANCE

Briefly Speaking

HILE the winning of Coot ball W championships i rather natural­ ly the mo t highly publicized of the activities carried on by Minnesota' athletic department, it is, nevertheless, only one part of the program conducted by the division which i headed by Frank McCormick. Alumni of cour e are acquainted with th work in other intercollegiate sports. in the field of physical education, and in intramural competition. Through the e variou activities nearly every male tudent in the niversity come in contact with the athletic department. In addition to the competitive angle there are many other clos ly related projects and policie which contribute to a well-rounded and comprehensive athletic program. There i. for ex­ ample. the job of playing ho t to other school and athletes in championship meet held at finne ota. Three week ago a highly succe CuI Big Ten wim­ ming meet was held in the var ity pool in the new athletic building. nd the National Collegiate ,im­ ming champion hips will be held at :\finne ota in 1937. The national meet your Travel Agent to show you thi ea on was held at Yale. The award of such an event of cour e stand how easy it is to include Brittany in an a a tribute to hoth the l\1inne-ota athletic divi ion and to the Cacilitie inexpen ive trip abroad. that have been provided for the u e Travel along it picturesque coast ... home­ of Minne -ota athlete . land of some of the greate t sailors in the '\ orId Bft ines Alumni ... men who till go out in tiny boats to fish The chool of Busine dmini tril- off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland ... lion does not maintain an official place­ ment bureau but it doe cooperate fully men who in the pa t.like Jacques Cartier, went with pro pective employer and with tudent and graduates in attempting out to found new empires ... men like Dugua - to end the right man to the right job. At the pre ent time the chool ha Trouin, who ranks with Nelson and Paul Jones more reque t for graduate than there in naval hi tory. (Many of these historic sea­ are graduate available. II Bu ine chool alumni who are seeking po-i­ port are al 0 smart modem summer resorts.) tions are invited to gel in touch with the chool. Inland you'll see quaint head-dresses ... olemn pardons ... marvelou Gothic churches Meeting ... frowning castles that once resounded to the Minne ola alumni in incinnati and Cleveland. Ohio and in Virginia, fin­ heavy tread of Dugue din and his men-at-arm . ne ota. are planning meeting in April. Alumni Secretary E . B. Pierce will be Let your T ra el Agent make all arrange­ pre ent at each of the gathering . Minnesota graduates in Kansas ity ments. His e.xped advice co ts you nothing. met on April S. while an alumni meet­ ing wa held in Little Fall this pa t week. Delail of the e me ting will be found in another section of thi ­ i sue. The date of the ineinnati din­ ner ha not been et definitely while IU FIfT H AVENUE (ROCKEfELlER CENTER). NEW lORK the other dates are: Virginia. April 16; leveland. April 28 . To England and France direct. and thus to all Europe: XOR~ANDIE. ),Iay 12 PARIS, April 11 lLE DE FRANCE, April 23 L.-\.FAYETTE. April l' CHAMPLAIN, May 2 448 THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

'The Golden Gophers of The University of Minnesota

. -- . .,..L... . . Victory Years

A 50 -Yard Line View of Minnesota Football

What do you know about the Gophers who are now in training for the 1936 season? Meet them in the booklet THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. It includes pictures of all the lettermen, a preview of the 1936 campaign, and other information about players and coaches that will be of interest to eyery alumnus interested in the game and in the activities of the Gophers. It has been hailed by sports writers and by alumni for its completeness in picturing 50 years of Minnesota football. The activities of the teams of 1933, 1934 and 1935 are featured. The book of 64 pages, 8Y2xll, contains more than 20,000 words and 90 pictures of players and scenes. It includes the records of all Minnesota football teams from 1886 through 1935. Eyery alumnus will prize a copy of this souvenir booklet. One Dollar. General Alumni Association lI8 Administration Bldg. University of Minnesota Minneapolis. The Story of Champions S long as football is played the record of Minne- This is my order for one copy of the souvenir A sota teams of the past three seasons will stand as booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. Bill me for one dollar when the book is mailed. one of the most brilliant achievements in the history of the popular American intercollegiate sport. This record is compiled in print and pictures in the souyenir Name booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. The order blank at the left is for your convenience in Address ordering your copy. Enclose the one dollar if you desire. Otherwise you will be billed when the book is mailed. City ______----.------.- --- .------The Minnesota AlulDni Weekly The Official Publication of Minnesota Alumni

VOLUME 3S • MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, APRIL 11, 1936 • UMBER 26

Modern Medicine and Ancient Folklore

HEREVER on this earth one en­ Tld/l interesting article is cO'mposed Iy it is a series of books written in W counters primitive people one is of excerpts from the lecture "The large part by Hippocrate , he whom we likely to find that the mo t re pected Emergence of Modern Medicine frO'm now call the "Father of )Iedicine." He and most feared man in the tribe i .Jncient Folklore" preaented by Dr. lived and worked in Greece some 400 the witch doctor. He i a sort of Walter C. All'arez in the 1936 Sigma years before Christ. He wa a mod­ Pooh Bah who exercise the function Xi Lectures in .Varthrop Merrwrial ern type of cientilic physician in that of physician, seer, prophet, prie t, or­ Auditorium. he observed clo ely wi.th a urprising­ cerer, master of ceremonies. and per­ Iy open mind; he de cribed what he haps even king. ometimes, he rep­ aw, he recorded hi failure a well resenL the finest flower of the develop­ As one would expect. the de cend­ a hi ucce se , and he u ed every­ ment of his people, and then again he ants of the witch doctor have not thing of curative value that he could may be little more than a juggler and changed their technique very much find. A one would expect from this, an a sa sin who will kill for a price. through the ages, and if tomorrow much of what he wrote 0 long ago But what happens when a avage they were to he called upon to cope is till of interest and value today. The falls out of a tree and breaks hi leg. Witll a terrible epidemic their method. few part that are of little value are or come back from a raid with part of would be practically the same a tho e the one, po ibly written by disciple. hi. calp hanging over his ear. or what of their savage ancestor-. They would in which the fact of ob ervation were is done to help the man who gets con­ douhtle begin as they did in biblical warped to fit one of tho e unprovable , tipat d or has a boil tbat need lanc­ time. in the middle ag • and in the theorie- of di ease which haye till , 0 ing? Will the witch doctor bother with terrible winter of 1918, by fixing the popular wi.th irregular practitioners such mall practice? No, that i' u ual­ blame on some group of per on who today. Iv b neath hi notice, and hence in had offended the deity. Then there A many of you h..'llOW, the Greek:, ;very tribe there i another kind of would he sacrifice and ceremony. ,01- looked upon the world as made up of healer. a man or woman who can clcan emn processions and pilgrimage . and four element : fire. air, earth and wounds and bring the edges together. the making of vow. all undertaken water. and the body of four humors. who can splint a broken leg or pull a with the hope of expiating sin and blood, phlegm, yell~w bile and black dislocated bone back into place, who propitiating an angry God. bile. These humer were aHected bv ran inci e an ab ces or knock out an The average individual would keep the four qualitie of matter: heat, cold, aching tooth, who can rna sage stiff hi window tightly rio ed at night to dryne and moi, ture. m u rle - or gi ve a sweat bath, and \\ ho keep out thc flying demon of di ca e. know the lore of medicinal plants. You who know omething of modern and he would certainly wear a protec­ cherni try and phy ic - will ay: "How And here I get to the central theme tive amulet. If during the epidemic. a illy," and yet those idea limited of my talk, and this i that from the sa \'age were to come to our hore with and restricted and largely • terilized time when man first stepped down out some explorer, he would ee nothing medical thought for two thousand of th trees and made him elf a tone new in all tlu and could only approve year. Even today. they aHect our axe dow'll to the pre ent moment. tbere heartily of very detail. peech. and we .ay that a man i of have always been in every community. a anguine. a phlegmatic. a choleric. a two types of medical practitioner: One ~Il T hurry on to point out a fact biliou or a melancholy nature, or that a believer in some supernatural or imi­ I \\ hich to me i a ource of pride, he ha a warm or a cold temperament. larly unprovable and ready made ex­ and thi i. that eyery worthwhile dis­ or that he i a cool a a cucumber. planation of disease as a wbole; the covery ever made and remembered and other, a student of the many di ea es every' accurate bit of information ever We phy ician. re\'ere Hippocrate, as he finds them; the one di dainIul of picked up and used by the ancient herb becau, e he wa. the first man to ee the study of the structure and work­ doctors and by all true tudent of dis­ clearly two thing: One. that many mgs of the human body; the other a ea, throughout the age-. i u ed in di, ea. e, clear up be t if the physician deep student of these scienc s; the onc eienlific medicine today. Every well doe- not muddle too much. the other. treating hy means of charms and spells. educated regular phy ieian toda~; is the that medicine ad\'ance only a it ceremony, hocu pocus, exorci m, and lineal de_cendanl and heir of the old break away entirely from ~agic . sacrifice; the other treating with physi­ herb doctor and primitivc urgeon. Gradually. through the two millen­ cal and chemical mea ure ; one whose ju t n every faith healer and every ir­ niums before Christ. physician. had forte i the cure of nervou trouble, anu regular practitioner who treat all ca::- . been coming to , ee that orne di­ ~elf-limited di ease; the other who~c alike, and eyery ignomnt quack "ho ea e are due to injury and contagion gr('atest surce s is found in the healing trent. by hocu POCl! of one kind or and the wearing nut of part.. but 0 of those lesions llch a de p wounds another i' n lincnl de cendant of the fnr a we ha\'e a record, Hippocrate~ or bad fractures in ,hich lother a­ witch doctors of ancient day. wa, the fir t to go the whole \\ ay and tllre, unaided, either fail to cure or Let me tell YOU a little 'about til(' state that no disease i purely miracu­ else ends up with a bad re ult. greate t of all the ancimt book . Renl- lou in origin. He woulu not e'\':clude 450 THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY even epilep y, which then wa called The next big step in the progress of night, hot on the trail of a cure for the sacred di ea e, because of tho e ter­ medical science came in 1628 with this vt'ry di ea e which has struck S0 rifying fits which seem 0 obviously to Harvey' great di covery of the cir­ c10e to you. Under those circum- be due to the intervention of a god or culation of the blood. This work e - lances th one thing left for you to of a devil. tabli hed the study of physiology or do will be to pray that the di. coverj And if religiou ly minded people had the cience of the function of the will not come too late. only listened to Hippocrates and his many organ of th body. In 1683 , urely when such day of orrow and uccessors and had given them the L ouwenhock, a shopkeeper, but a anxiety come you do nol want to have freedom to dissect, to perform autop­ wonderful scienti t for all that, di­ tile door of hope slammed shut in your sies, to experiment on animals, and to cover d bacteria, and in 1719 Mergagni face with the announcement that cer­ report honestly and fearles ly what founded the science of pathology, which tain people who cared for animal more they found, how almost certain it i deal with the change that are to be than they cared for men and women that today medical knowledge would found in the bodies of per ons d ad and little children havc ucceeded in be hundreds of years ah ad of where of di ease. pa sing a law that stopped work in it is, with tuberculo i and cancer and Later there came much progres in tho every laboratorie in which thi. arthritis perhaps only memorie of the differentiation of di ea es by care­ beneficent and mo t promi. ing work the past. ful study of the symptoms and the wa going on. I am ure that mo t of But all through the ages a large sec­ phy ical finding, until physicians were you men and women would never con- tion of the people in every country able to di tinguish malaria from ty­ ent to uch a thing if only you under­ have kept saying, "No, you mu n't do phoid fever, mea Ie from German tood the problem, and if only you that," thus making it hard for re­ measles, diphtheria from croup, and believed your univer ity authoritie. search worker to carryon their bene­ appendicitis from ordinary stomach­ when they as ure you lhat today lab­ ficent work for the relief of human ache. Around 1877 Pa tcur discovered oratory animals are well laken care of. suffering. the role that germs play in the cau a­ and, when operated on, are always kept Really, aren't we human being tion of di ease; protective vaccine be­ under surgical ane thesia. curiou in our mental proces es? In gan to be made, and Lister showed In summing up, now. I will a k you the Middle Ages they loved to hitch a how to bani h uppuralion from urgi­ dray horse to each of a man' hands to keep in mind the two type of medi­ cal wound. In 1846, Morton and cal practitioner. that have been with and feet and drive the e hor es off in others di covcred ane the ia, and ur­ four different direction ; they loved to us from th beginnings of the race; gery was able to forge rapidly ahead. one the wilch doctor with hi reliance strip off a man's skin while he wa Finally, with the full development of still alive, or to break his bones on the on magic, the other the herb doctor bacteriology there came wonderful and primitive surgeon with his con- wheel or to roast him over a low fire, triumphs in the prevention and cure of but just let the crowd which had tant efforl to improve his knowledl(e many of the infectious di ea e that of the body and it disea es, and hi looked on so approvingly di cover that have plagued mankind. an eminent teacher of medicine, trying constant search for effici nt m thods to learn how better to help suffering of treatment. humanity, had dissected what was ODA Y we ar ntering on a mar­ Throughout the agt'~ anel \'t'n to­ left of the poor prisoner after the hang­ T velou pha e of medical develop­ day these two types of medicine havr man was done, and they would turn in ment, and many eeming miracle art' exi Lcd side by ide, and strange mi~­ wrath to rend the impious wretch who already being performed. The phy-io­ ture of the two have alwav. been had dared "to 0 desecrate a human logical chemi t i having hi inning, and compounded. Today, although ,ci n­ body!" every few months, s meone i olates tific medicine i forging rapidly ahead from om one of the gland of th and bringing in its train mirncles of This might be amu ing now in an body a new ub tance which ha un­ abstract way were it not for the fact healing, it . till has to fight its way canny powers in the way of controlling against opposition from the many that today, it still is hard to get human growth and development. One of the bodies for di ection, and so bitter is peoplc who , till believe that di_ea. e sub tance make giants, another make can easily he treated by one who has the opposition of animal lovers to the midget, another produces goiter, an­ progress of scientific medicine, that in little or no training in the science of other makes the breasts of 11 virgin ani­ medicine. some cities the pound man does not mal fill with milk, and others produce dare to sell even a dead dog for study cancer at the will of the inve ligator. I They ay that once upon a timp in the local medical chool. feel sure that we are but on the thrcsh­ a man of God was treed by an angry Just think of Aristotle, the greatest old from which we shall soon glimpse bear who started to climb up after him. naturalist, and one of the greatest phy­ even greater wonders. At first the mini ter prayed, "Oh Lord. sicians of all time, having to admit, A yet we do not know how to use help me" but as the bear kept on com­ that, even with the backing of his curatively all tho e gifts of the chem­ ing he gasped out. "Oh Lord. if you won't help me, at least don't help tht' pupil and patient, Alexander, the most ist, and many are not yet even on powerful ruler of the then known bear." And 0 I close with the plea the market, but with time and ex­ world, he had been unable to dissect that if ome of you ar not intert' tt'd perience, there mu t surely come from even one human body, and he had some of them great benefit lo the in helping the teachers of medicine never seen a man's kidney or a wom­ and the research workers who are try­ human race. an's uterus! ing to advance the progress of medical Fortunately, in the sixteenth cen· 1\ of these great gifts of Clence science and to supply you with even tury, the opposition to the dissection are for you and your children. No one better and abler and finer physi('ian ~. of the human body died down suffi­ of you know on what day orne dis at least will you plea e not ht'lp tho,r ciently in a few Italian cities so that ease, as yet incurable, is going to strike who would lower standard of eclu Vesalius was able to see how a man down som one dear to you; and wh 11 ('ation and clo e the re earch labors­ is made inside, and to publi h in 1543, that day comc thc only hop your torie . As Dr. John Abel. lhat grand the first accurate book on anatomy. physician may be able to give you old man of pharmacology, once ,o i.d . Obviously until such knowledge was will b that in several laboratories in "Greater even than the greatest dl ~­ secured, the practice of surgery was lhis country or abroad, devoted men covery is to keep open the "ay to impossible. and worn n are working late into the future discoveries." \.PTlIL 11, 1986 451

Power and Speed Displayed by Football Squad

JrJrat About the Cophers? By Anoka is a brother of Maurice Johnson, end on the 1934 team. I there a chance that the squad of Bill Gih on '27 1986 can continue the sen ational win­ The line candidates are the big and lling treak which has carried Minne­ rangy type of athletes. They are heavy >D ta through three sea on of football becau e they are big rather than big without defeat? Dell of Akron, Ohio and Ray lo-e of becau e they are heavy. Will Bernie Bierman and hi a 'i ­ )Iinn apoli.. Weld, Hanson and Twe­ The backfield combination which tants be able to rebuild the team to dell ha\e been working in the number might be listed as the Number One championhip trength after 10 ing uch one line during the greater part of quartet of backs- ubject of course to tal\larts as George Ro coe, Glenn the lime lhu. far in the pring driU . change without notice - include ~ eidel, Vernal LeVoLr, Dick mith, A fixture in one tackle poition next Harvey truthcr, quarterback; Andy ' heldon Beise, Vernon Oech and Dale faU of cour e will be Co-captain Edwin Uram and Julie Alfon e, halfback. Rennebohm? In that group there i Wids th who I~;U undoubtedly rank as and Charley 'Vllkinson, fullback. an all-American backfield and nearly one of the fine t linemen in football enough man-power for an all-star fot­ nexl autumn. Tbi pring he i pend­ ward wall. ing lli time with the ba eball quad. peed in Backfield Wilh the squad of 70 candidate Louis Midler of t. Paul proved hi TRGTHER i a fir t year man JU-t completing the econd week of ability La -t ea on and he will ee S and like LeVoir hail' hom l\Iin­ pring practice it is much too early to plenty of ervice at tackle during the neapoli ~lar hall high chool on the offer very definite an wers to the above coming campaign. It i po sible that edge of the campu . His appearance at question. nd e peciaHy 0 in "iew of Willi nlith of ':\Iinneapolis will also the signal calling po t ha been one of the fact that the ion thus far have be a\'ailable next fall. the urpri e of the fir t tlTO week of been held in the Field Hou e becau e .\ promising performer from the re­ the pring practice e sion. am Hunt, of the wintry pril weather. 'erves of last a on i Bob Hoel, .:?OO the leading candidate for the po ~ t pound athlete from :\Iinneapoli . How­ amon a the lettermen, i playing base­ ard Parkimon ha been mentioned and ball thi pring. Wilkin on who per­ Rugged Linemeu al 'o from the fir t year delegation there formed at guard during the pa t two T may be , aid hOlyever that from i Ian in LeVoir, brother of ~Iinne­ campaign wa witched fir t to quar­ I the physical standpoint thi quad sota' all-around backfield tar of the terback and then to fullback. While at­ of athlete i one of the finest looking pa t three ea ons. tending ~hattuck chool at Faribault that .Minnl'sota ha' ever boa ted. The Two veteran and a fre hman are he ITa a back and tho ~e who saw him boy are big and rugged and fa t. fighting it out for the number one carry the ball after intercepting pas e Tlll're i a combination of qualitie center poition. The lettermen are in game of last year know that he i a to warm the heart of any coach. But Earl veIlcben of ~Iinneapoli and tan hnrd man to top once he get under­ \I hether the newcomer -the re erves Han -on of :Mound while the firt year way. He i over.Lx leet in height and and the Ire hmen-will be able to tand candidate i John Kulbit ki, 200-pound weigh nearly 200 pound. Wbitman the te t in aclual competition i ome­ hu ky from Virginia, Minne'ota. Rork and Vic padaccini are fullback thing that will not be fully determined re erye from la ' t ea ' on. until next eptember and October. Power at End veral powerful fre hman back are Howard Parkin on, a Q':ZO-pound aI -o making a bid for fullback duties al­ I E OTA' end play hould be tackle candidate from t. Paul, is a. though the e men are al 0 being given fine looking a first year prospe t a. M something to watch llext fall. The trials at 11aJfback and at quarter. one would cnre to ee. And yet it i' four leader' at the moment are Ray The leading fir t year line-buskers are not rea onable to believe that in hi ' King, Dwight Reed, Ray Antil and Phil Belfiori of Buhl, Larry Buhler of first year of competition he will be Frank Warner. King i' playing ba e­ Windom, George Fau t, :\larty hri t­ ball this pring and another letterman, ablc to measure up to the performance ian on and Ray trate of ~linneapoli . of Dick mith of la t ea on. He may Dominic Krezow' ki, is . pending hi Each of these men weigh - 190 pound­ develop rapidly enough thi spring of lime \I-jth the track team. 1 early even or more and they are all fair blocker­ cour e to carryon in the highly ef­ with the-e men 0 far a ahility i con­ and have peed. fective Smith manner-in which case cerned i - Ru - Wile, another letterman. The e athlete- together with "'ilbur it will be tough 011 the oppo ition on Thu- the quad ha lettermen three that ide of the line. deep for the wing job . ~Ioore of Au tin and Bate' , former With harley Wilkinson bcing tried In the group of line candidates there :\linueapoli entral tar, may also be at both the qunrterback and fuUba k are four brothers of men who have li ted a poten tial halfback while po ilions the enter of the line mul played important role- in l\Iinne ota Fau t ha- been working al 0 at the quarterba k post. loore, the 1 0 be completely rebuill. ucce .. e' 011 the gridiron in recent Among the lettermen from In t 'ea­ ),('ar'. All n Rork, promi 'ing lineman, pound ~ peed , ter, who wa the en a­ ,on are Bob Weld, Edward Kafka lind from Eau lain:" Wiscon-Ln, is a tion of the fre hman team of la -t fall. am Riley, Dal, Hanson, another vet­ brother of Whitman Rork, fullback re- fractured a bone in his ankle during ('ran who wa not in sch 01 lasl fall efl'c of the pa t two , eason: and a the winter and will do but little train­ i a. alua.ble addition to the guard member of the 19:J6 squad. It ha' been ing thi -pring. depal'lm 'nl while Francis Twedell. a mentioned that :\IalTin LeVoir i a The Yeteran hlllfbacks are Julie Al- ':201 pound lineman from .\u tin. i­ brolher of the versatile "Babe." Earl fon -e, .\ ndy ram, Rudy Gmitro the leading ('andidate of the mom nt '"emlsen, leading center candidote, is larence Thomp n, and Bill ~Iathen\: from the freshman squad. Other fir t 11 brother of George yend 'en of the while Harvey Ring can work at eith;r ycar men nol for behind are Horace 19:Jl ele 'en while Bob John, on of the halfback or the quarterback post-. 452 THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

~ampus Notes Classes Make Plans for Reunions EN P.LLMER, pr()lIliltellt Minneapolis attorney, has been named HE subject of tudent government B chairman of the 1911 class committee which is making plaWl for T is a campus perennial. The great the annual Alzllll1li lJali program on the campus on June 15. The majority of the student show but committee will meet (j;/ce every two weeks until the lime of the event. little interest in the probl m that are It is traditional thai the tu:enty-five year class ecymplete the arrange­ brought up for discu sion by campus ments for the Alumni Day activities including the dinner in the '11win political leader and publicized by the ball room of the Minnesota Union in tlte evening. Mr. Palmer will pre­ . The voter are left side at the dinner. more or les unmoved by the charge that the admini tration really has the Other quinquennial, or five-year classes, are also making plaWl for final say in affairs which theoretically their reuniOWl on the campus on June 15 which is also the date of the reside within the realm of student Commence'ment exercises. Nearly all of the classes have named their government. The campaign for inde­ ccymmittee chairman and this pa.st week it was announced that Clarence pendence in making deciion however Torl1loen '26L. of Duluth, will head the committee m,al.;ing plan.s for the continues from year to year under the reunion activities of the ten-year group. direction of member of the student council and other campus political leaders. This week the students were to go election included: Je ie A lak on, who Ibert Dri coli, Jack Intlekofer, J . to the po]] to vote on new amend­ defeated Jane peake for the senior Bradford Baker, Bernhardt Petry, Jack ment to the con titution. One article cla po t; Iabeth kogmo, junior Blomslrand, R. Pversvee, John tuck, would give the pre ident of the a1l­ repre entative, oppo ed by Eleanor Howard lark, Earl Bennet on, Jean University council the power to ap­ Jones; and Betty Ritchie, cho en in Barnhill, A. Carhad and Jean Temple­ point the student member of the Uni­ preference to Ruth Chri toffer by next ton. verity Senate. In anticipation of an year's sophomores. affirmative vote on thi section, Ted The new interprofessional repre­ In the News Christianson '36L, council president, sentative will be Naomi Briggs, who Dr. Allen Hemingway, profe or or asked the present student members of defeated Belty Vincent. Ruth Van physiological chemi try, has received the University Senate to re ign early Braak wa elecled agricultural repre­ the terling rellowship at Yale uni­ this week to clear the way for the sentative, and as such will serve as versity for next year. tarting ep­ appointment of new repre entatives. president of the farm campu W.S.G.A. tember 15 he will work with Dr. H. G board. She was opposed by Peggy Barbour of Yal , an authority on the Law Review Jerome, who will act as the new vice phy iology of mammalian temperature John A. Anderson, law junior, was pre ident. regulation and antipyretic drug~ this week elected president of the law Other farm campu officers chosen lement Ramsland, in tructor in the Review board. Hc will replace Frank were: Dorothy Jane rouch, secretary; speech department, will direct "Hay Plant, present pre ident and recent arol -White, trea urer; Glady Die s­ Fever," n xt niversity Theatre pro­ case editor. Three other officer were ner, enior repre~entative; :l\Iary duction, which will be pre en ted in the elected by Caculty and enior members Longley, junior repreenlalive; and fu ic auditorium April 14-18. of the board: Warren Blaisdell will be Ruth Kittleson, sophomore representa­ tive. "Hay Fever" will be the last play note editor; Frank Graham and Arthur in the regular 1935-36 series. The Burck, associate editors. All are juniors comedy is one of the earlier plays by in the Law school. Fliers Win Awards Noel oward, whose Broadway hits­ The Law Review is a monthly peri fembers of :Minncsota's Flying Club "De ign Cor Living," "Bittersweet," odical publi hed by tudents of the .. avalcade" and "Private Lives"­ Law school under the supervi ion of have becn awarded tile Loening Trophy for the second succes ive year. The have made him one oC the mo t popular faculty advisers. It is the official organ playwright of the day. of the Minnesota Bar a sociation. award is based on flying activities and participation in the national intercol­ Board members review the advance Stratosphere sheets of court reporters, and when legiate air meet. The Minnesota club they discover a case that is of legal members pay their own flying expenses The presence of Dr. Jean Piccard, interest, they bring it up at a meeting but were able to score more points than world famous stratosphere expert, on of the board. Articles are as ign d at the Harvard club which owns six the campu this quarter as an instruc­ these meetings. The finishcd articles planes. tor in th department of aeronautical analyze and comment on the legal During the spring vacation 11 acro­ engineering, has aroused much interesl significance of the cases. nautical engineering student travellcd concerning the possibility of a stratu- through the east on a special tour to ph ere flight in this section. B fort' lV.S.O.A. Elections visit various flying fields and airplane he arrived to as umc his duties there In the annual W.S.G.A. el ction on factories. At the annual meeting of werc rumors that he would make Tue day, a total of 787 vote ' were the Int 'rcoIIegiatc F lying club held in linne ola the scene of an a cent into ca t by the women voter of the cam­ Wa hington thc 1inncsota d legation the upper air this coming ummer. pus, and Jean Myel' '37, was elected reccived awards as the larg st grOllp Dr. Piccard however ha not in

Washington Alumni ~IDbs Bold Meetings ilE TVa3hington, D. C. T 1lumni Association held its TE of the major cinema attrac­ are Robert K. Carnes '94L, of Royal­ second annual dinner at the O tions of the p t winter for MIn­ ton, and Dr. John B. imonds '30:\1d, Lafayette Hotel on March 26th. nesota alumni and other football fan" of wan ville. There were eighty-one present, Ius been the film depicting the play by Following their meeting at six o'clock including alumni and their fami­ play activitie of the Golden Gophers the alumni joined with the members of lies. on the gridiron during the 1935 ea on the Little Fall Lions lub at dinner. John F. McGovern '11, Presi­ The pictures were taken during the enator Frederick J . :\liller '12L, pre­ dent of the Association, presided. season for the athletic department by sided at the dinner. Among the honor A mong the speakers were Rep­ Phil Brain, tennis coach. guest on the occa ion were the resentative Usher L. Burdick '04, During the past everal month , members of the athletic teams of Little Representative Paul Kvale '20, :\lr. Brain ba accompanied Alumni Fall high chool of which Earl C. and Arthur J. ("Dutch") Berg­ ' ecretary E. B. Pierce on numerou Van Du en '25G, i superintendent. m~n , backfield and head ba3/l­ trips throughout the tate to show the The principal peaker of the dinner ball coaclz at 'Minnesota from picture at alumni gathering . And program wa Dr. L. J. Cooke who gave 1927-1 929 and now kead foot­ Ur. Pierce ha taken the film with one of hi , highly intere ting and en­ ball coach at Catholic niversity. him on hi longer trips to attend tertaining di course. Alumni cretary JJotion pictures of the champion­ meeting of graduate in other sec­ E . B. Pierce spoke briefly at the dinner ship football team of 1935 were tion . They have al 0 been hown be­ and appear~d on the program at the shown, and the interest displayed fore core' of luncheon and dinner high chool at which the high chool indicate..'! that alumni enthusiasm club and other organization in and athletes were awarded their letter in i.Y a3 high in IT' a3hington a3 in around the Twin Citie . the variou ports. Picture of the Minnesota. Mione ota football game of the pa t Pla7UJ were discu.Ysed for a regu­ Cleveland sea on were shown by Phil Brain, lar series of meetings which will Gopher tennis coach. Alumni ecretary E. B. Pierce will probably include a d~nce on At the dinner the entire group join­ Homecoming Day. The pub­ be the guet of the :\1inne ota Alumni ed in the inging of l\Iinne ota song' lub in Cleveland, Ohio, on Thur day lication of an alumni directory with 1\1rs. Gille pie (Delen D. Dale U:a3 also c()/UJidered. evening, April 23 . He will peak and '19) at the piano. A feature of the there will be a howing of the picture ongfe t wa the inging of the little Officers elected for the Comi7tg of the linne ota football game. of the known ver e of the popular "~Iinne ota year are John F. McGovern '11, past ea on. All :Minne otan in that Rou er." The mu ic and words of the President, Arthur G. Peterson area are invited to be present at the vere appear in the new ong folder '26, rice-President, and Erling B. ilinner. In charge of the arrangements publi hed by the General Alumni A - axlzaug '29, Secret~ry . for the occa ion i Gate E. Hunt '20E, sociation. 1563 Lewi Drive, Lakewood, Ohio. Alumni may call him for further de­ tail. and to make re ervations. Hi Kansas City ity, Mo., Journal-Po t; Price Wick­ telephone number i Lakewood 576 W. l\Iinne ota alumni in Kansa City ersham 'OOL, AJpha Tau Omega, 91 It i pos ible that a meeting of Min­ met at a dinner on April 8, with Alumni Commercial building; O. . mith '9-2 ne ota. alumni will be held in incin­ ecretary E. B. Pierce as the gue t Ex, 704 " . 16th treet, Kansas City, nal1 earlier in the week but the date peaker. Harry ~1. Werbitsky '28M, Kan ; Roberta :\1artin Cochrane, 7~~ has not been confirmed. wa chairman of the committee making Ward Parkway; ~1r. '~5 and ~Ir'. the general arrangement for the oc­ . L. John ton, 2718 Linwood boule­ Virginia casion and he presided at the dinner. vard; ~Ir . '2~E and :\Ir . Edward L. Mr. Werbitzh:y introduced Price E penett. 2011 E. 4 Terrace; )Ir. The Minnesota Alumni lub in Wicker ham 'OOL, who in turn pre- '21L and :\1r . . J. Iver 'on p1arion Virginia will hold a dinner me ting on ented Ir. Pierce. ~1r. \ icker ham Day '~q), 633 W. 62d treet; and )Ir,. April 16. The peaker from the campu wa one of :Minne ota' early student M. H. 1att on (Mabel Rodlun '02) . will be E. B. Pierce and Alvin Eurich, football manager and he had It part Harris H. Wright '09E. 0 Green­ a i tant to the president. Augu t in the bringing of Dr. H. L. William way Terrace; Iaurice John on 'S5, the Neubauer '17 g, i in charge of gener­ to linnesota a head football coach. ~orthwe tern l\1iller: arol White 'S5, al arrangement for the occasion. Pic­ Edward W. Cochrane, port editor of Theta, 5131 \Yyandotte: Genevieve ture of linne ota footbill games of the Kansas ity Journal Po t. attended Werbitzky; Alumni ecretary E . B. the 1985 season will be hown. the meeting of the Minnesota group Pierce '04; Harry :\1. Werbitzky '23~1, and he wa introduced. 5880 Brooklyn; W. W. Butler 'I5Gr. Little Falls Alumni ecretary Pierce pre ented _0~5 E. 7!th t. Terrace: ~1abel L. Johnson 'Q9 T. U an Gale 'SlEd: group of more than 40 graduate an enterlaining word picture of the niversity a' it i today and di cu ed l\Ir. 'lOEx and :\Ir . Hubert .\. wain, who met at the Buckman hotel in Little Falls on April 8 organized a the educ~tional achie~ement of the 2912 Olive avenue; W. E . Butler '80B Morri on ounty alumni unit. Paul in~titlilion in recent year. 417 We t 59 Terrace: J. ~I. Levin '1 E, Gille pie '17, vice-pre ident of the l\Iolion picture of the l\Iinne ota. Levin Bro ., Inc., 311 E. 48d treet: Am rican National Bank in Little Fall football game of the 1935 sea on 1 alhan Le,-in '~O . Amba , ador hotel; was elected pre ident of the new organ­ wer€' hown. The gue l also joined Dr. Hjalmnr E. arlson '~9:\[d. 4819 izalion, and L. F. lartin 'SOB, was in th .inging of ~Iinne ota ong . :\Ii'sion Road: aUlI :\1r. 'Q8~I and cho" 'n a ecretary. Director who .\ mollg tho e pre'eut: Euward W. Mr . Alexander l\1. Gow, 27_~ Jule wi ll repre ent the neighboring towns ochrane, sporls editor of the Kan a _treet, t. J 0 eph, Mo. 454 THI!J MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEn.y

The MINNESOTA home economics, a group will leave New York July 1. travel and tudy in the Scandinavian countries and relurn Augu t 27. A special school for religiou leaders will be held ALUMNI ",ri WEEKLY from July 13 to July 24.

F THE ixty book on educational subjects Published by O selected a the leading volumes published in that The General Alumni Association of the field during the pa t year. five were written in whole University of Minnesota or in part by members of the faculty of the Univer- ity of Minnesota. The Ii t is publi hed in the April WILLIAM S. GIBBON, '27, Editor and Business Manager number of the Journal of the National Education LORAINE SKlNNER '35, Aui8t.. nt Editor ociation. Final selection of the 60 titles from among more Vol. 35 April 11, 1936 No. 26 than 700 published during the year is made from corings and comments of more than 300 peciali t Issued on Saturday of each week during the regular session, from and from a study of hundreds of reviews. The list i September to June, and monthly during July and August. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Minneapolis, Minnesota. prepared annually for the American Library Associa­ Life suhscription with life memberahip in the General Alumni Asso­ eiation are $60. Yearly 8ubscriptions are $8. Subscribe with central office tion of the National Education As ociation in the edu­ or local secretaries. Office on the campus i. 118 Administration Building. cation department of the Enoch Pratt Library of Bal­ Telephone: Main 8177. timOl'e. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS The following are Minne ota contributions to the ORREN E . SAPFORD. '10L, Prerident...... _.. .. _. ... _.... _.... _... .Minneapolis Ii t of 60 best volume of 1935: ERLINO S. PLATOU, '20Md, Vice-Preridtnt.. .. _ ...... __ ...... -Minneapolia 1'1108. F . W~CIl, '98, '96L, Trsa.8Urer...... _.... _.... _.... _.... _ ... .Minneapolis Alvin E . Eurich, as i tant director of the bureau E. B. PlERC&, '04, E.,.outi". S.cretc.1"I/ ...... _...... _ ...... _.... _.... St. Paul of educational re earch. and H . A. Carroll, as istant profe or of educational p ychology, are author of "Educational Psychology." Ivol Spafford, as istant NEWS and VIEWS professor of euthenics, wrote "Fundamental in Teaching Home Economics." N JUNE 15 several hundred alumni will return Harold Benjamin, assistant dean of the College of O to the campus for the annual Alumni Day pro­ Education, served a editor of "Education for Social gram of class reunions and other feature of interest Control," the November, 1935, is ue of the Annal of to the graduate. And at the same time another large the American Academy of Political and Social cience. group of graduates will return to the University to He contributed two articles to lhi volume a well. continue their studies. This latter group of course in­ Other professor who were repre ented were Dean cludes those engaged in various forms of educational E . M. Haggerty. College of Education; Edgar B. work who return to the campus each summer to at­ Wesley, associate profes or of education; and Lucien tend the Summer Sessions. B. Kinney, in tructor in the College of Education. An increase of between 10 and 15 per cent in sum­ Mr. Wesley al 0 planned and edited the fifth year­ mer school registration this year is expected by book of the National Council for ocial Studies. Leo Thomas A. H . Teeter, director of the summer session. J . Brueckner, professor of education, contributed to This year the two terms will be from June 15 to July the tenth yearbook of the National Council of Teach­ 25 and from July 25 to August 29. ers of Mathematics. More than 700 courses in every university college A. V. Overn, who received his Ph.D. here in 1930, are listed in the recently released summer bulletin. wrote "The Teacher in Modern Education." This year, for the first time, the General college will offer eight courses for summer students. R. MALCOLM M. WILLEY has recently been Two off-campus educational experiments will again D appointed by the Social Science Research council be conducted in connection with the summer school. to membership on a special committee promoting re­ At Owatonna, the College of Education will conduct search on the social aspects of the depression. The for the fourth year, the "Owatonna Art Education committee intends to organize a program for evaluat­ project." Aided by the Carnegie Foundation and the ing the social effects of the depression in certain fields. Owatonna public school system, it will offer to resi­ exposing and promoting research where it is needed. dents of Owatonna and the vicinity five courses in Serving with Professor Willey on the committee art design, education, and appreciation. will be Prof. William F. Ogburn of the University of At the forestry and biological station in Itasca Chicago, chairman, and Dr. Shelby Herrison of the Park, five departments of the Arts college and the Russell Sage foundation, New York. Dr. S. A. Stouffer College of Agriculture, Forestry and Home Economics of the University of Chicago will be in general charge will conduct 19 laboratory courses in the biological of the committee's work. sciences. Field trips will play an important part in Professor Willey is now engaged in a study of the this project, which was begun last year. effect of depression and recovery on higher educa­ Students in home economics will have an oppor­ tion, a project sponsored by the American Association tunity to take a European trip and earn University of Univer ity Profe sol's. Hi membership on the credits at the same time. Under the direction and ocial science committee erves in some mea ure to supervision of Miss Gudrun Carlson, instructor in integrate the work or the two organizations. APRIL 11, 1936 455

influence into the campus politics of the time. The wise candidate for stu­ The Reviewing Stand dent office made it a point to win the favor of the Bedrock group. The w. s. G. members of the cla s of 1886 who will celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Remember the Day? Mose Strathern and L. A. Page. The the graduation of their class on Alumni question of Iootball reform was very Day in June will probably recall this N THE early Nineteen Hundreds much in the air at the time and the early student organization. I there was a strip of land between faculty committee of the niver ity The month of lay. 1921, was a the old Physics building and the Knoll of Wiscon in had gone 0 far as to momentous one in the history of the that belonged to the city of Minne­ suggest that the game be suspended for University. In that month came the apolis and was supervised by the two years in the western conference. . inauguration of a new president, Lotus park board. The area was bordered on D. Coffman, and the opening of the three sides by the campus and the CJlmpaign to rai e funds for the erec­ students of the time thought of it as Dr. Cooke tars tion of a new auditorium and a foot­ a part of the campus. The park ball stadium on the CJlmpus. A resolu­ And here i another port item from police thought otherwi e however and tion wa drawn up which called for the the news of 30 years ago this spring: occasionally one of tho e officers would raising of a memorial fund of $2,000,- Last week for the first time in the his­ come along and arrest a tudent for tory of the University, the faculty basket­ 000. riding his bicycle on the sidewalk in ball leam defealed the var ity quint. The the area. playing was fast and fierce throughout. Those Co-eds One day in 1903 when a medical stu­ The defeat does not how particular weak­ dent wa picked up for trespassing on ne s on the part of the Varsity for the In March of 1916 the Minnesota faculty presented an unusually strong Daily printed a series of questionnaires the forbidden ground his classmates aggregation. With Willis and Pierce as surrounded the policeman and de­ with questions for the co-eds to forwards, Dr. Cooke at center. and an­ answer. Here were ome of the re­ manded that he justify his action. And ford and Leach as guards, they had a well they insisted that he stand on a barrel nigh unbeatable team. The varsity pre­ sults. The average salary demanded of to make the speech. He could not sented the following line-up: Clark and prospective husbands was 1,650 al­ make him elf heard above the heckling McRae. forwards; Ely, center. and Brown though a few girls declared that they of the crowd however and he was and "Mart" Larson. guard'. The game would consider no man with an annual soon ",hi ked off to the Minneapolis- was fast and clean throughout with the income of less than 5,000. In answer pos ible exception of Dr. Cooke who be­ to a question concerning professional t. Paul car line to be put aboard a came rather "fussed" in the econd half car bound for St. Paul. The motormen preference in husbands the largest and was lightly inclined to rough it. The number voted for doctors while farm­ on several cars ensed some kind of an playing of Leach and Cooke for the faculty per unu ual ituatioll when they saw the was e pecially good. The final core was ing came econd. Ninety cent of crowd and refused to stop. Then orne :I'l to 'l6. the girls who replied to the question­ oC the tudent lay down on the tracks naire were definitely oppo ed to mus­ and the next CJlr topped and the of­ taches while all wanted hu bands who ficer was put aboard. Prexy in Chapel could and would dance. Lincoln was voted to be the ideal type of man. That The next day three park police and On a Friday morning in early April was 20 years ago. a detective were on hand to guard the in 1911, President Cyru Northrop area again t student invasion. It was made hi final appearance in chapel as a tough as ignment Cor the officers. the head of the University of linne- Co-education Questioned After being jostled about by the stu­ ota. On behalf of the tudent, Fred­ erick Ware, president of the academic The que tionnaire idea was severely dents for some time they were all criticized by a faculty member writing senior clas, presented Dr. Northrop taken to the treet CJlr line and con- in the Daily a few days later. He igned to St. Paul. In chapel on the with a silver tea et. In clo ing his remark. the beloved prexy injected a aid, in part: "Co-education in our uni­ same day, President Northrop informed versities has not yet pro\'en itself an the students that an understanding in humorous touch . . . typical of the man . . . with the following: "When unqualified ucce . ~fany level-headed the matter would be reached between people have doubted and they continue the University and the city officials if the new president comes tomorrow morning and you greet him you must to doubt the wi dom of uch' a sy tern. there were no further trouble with the Certain growing tendencies at the Uni­ police. remember that I am not going because he comes, but that he come ' becau e I versity of l\finue ota have added ma­ am going. He has had nothing to do terially to the seriou ne s of these Organize M Club with my going but I have had some­ doubt. Beauty contest and ballot­ thing to do with hi coming." ings for 'ideal hu bands' and other The "1\1" club was formed on a entimental rubbi'h of this sort has permanent basis at a meeting in the On the following morning, Dr. done much to damn the system. . . . office of Dr. Henry L. Williams in George E. incent took up hi duties Small wonder that under the circum- January, 1906, thirty years ago. The a pre ident of the Univer ity. At the tauces many men and women turn club wa formed to forward the in­ time linne ota hud an enrollment of eastward to institutions Ie s epicene. terest of football at l\Iinne ota and to nearly 5,000 resident tudents. where mixed pink teas are almost un­ consider the question of football re­ known and weekends of ogling form. The officers elected at that Bedrock Club frivolity are non-existent? ... Luck­ meeting in 1906 were a follows: ily, the men of the profes ional _chool Charle' Van ampen, pre ident: Wil­ Back in the eighties there wa a are tied to the rna t of their work and liam Leary, vice pre ident; Dr. E. P . student' eating club on the campus the. siren song come only faintly to Harding, ecretary, and Gilmore Dobie, by the name of "Bedrock." The mem­ theLr ear'. They mu t look on with treasurer. Others present were Willis bers occupied a hou_e at 1118 Fourth amu ed wonder at the chatter of Walker, ig Harris. Edward Rogers, treet outhen't and extended their Vanity Fair." 456 THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

Alumnae Club Assists Univel-sity Women

HERE were Minnesota alumni Plans wer rushed lor a breakfast T groups as soon as there were grad­ or tea for women of the senior class uates, in which women members work­ at the next meeting held at the home ed for the alumni as a whole; but not of Irs. Alice Rockwell Warren '04 until 1914 did the Twin City women who is till ho tess at alumnae meets band into a separate organization to The Alumni Weekly for that year make the influence of the women of records that the alumnae did treat the the University felt upon matter, of eniors, and that students jammed special interest to the alumnae alone. Shevlin llall, waiting for refreshments, Through such a group, it would be pos­ so tempting was the menu. sible for alumnae to keep up their col­ From one hundred members, it has lege associations, and to create loans wollen in size to two hundred and for undergraduate women. fifty members, and provides an ever On February 23, 1914, thirty women, growing medium for alumnae to keep interested in thc project of a Minne­ up college contacts. Starting origin­ sota alumnae club, met at the Woman's ally in Minneapoli , it has large mem club building to discuss such an organ­ bership in St. Paul. ization. Like the first Constitutional Its development has been greate. t Convention, this meeting was only pre­ in its work for undergraduate women . liminary to provide publicity for a From senior teas. the organization ha later meeting when all interested in now made possible 500 for short loan the movement might be informed of purpo es and cholarships for many plans. deserving high school student who l\n unexpectedly large number of wish to enter the University. fifty women met at this next schedul­ The $500 loan, called the Je sie Ladd ed meeting March 4, and as many l\1Rs. ESTELLE INGOLD '24 Loan fund, founded in 1921, is admin­ more indicated that they would favor Alumnae President istered through the office of the dean such an organization. of women on the basis of need. Loans The fifty women chose two nomina­ are for terms of three months maxi­ ting committees. mum. In no case may they exceed 50 per applicant, and are usually given On the first committee for the nom­ for tuition. inations of a president, vice president Chosen to be first officers of the and secretary-treasurer, were Mrs. Minnesota Alumnae club was Mrs. Grace Rector Taylor '99, Mi s Jes ie I abelle Welles Gray '95, who is still Medical Program F. Caplin '97 and Mrs. Bessie Law­ an active member of the alumnae as­ sociation; Carrie Fletcher Cole '02 rence McGregor 'SO. Eleven Univerity anatomi t, iu­ secretary and treasurer. c1uding Dean Richa'nl E . cammon of A second committee, to bring in An alumni day committee appointed the Medical school allu Dr. C. M nominations for a social committee was Jackson, heau of the department of created and included Mrs. Alice Rock­ at that meeting included the following anatomy, took part in a meeting of well Warren '04, Mrs. Anna Quevli members: the American A ociation of Anato­ Jorgens '00 and Mrs. Carrie Fletcher Mrs. O. B. Gould '79; Mrs. George mi ts at Duke university, Durham, N Rockwood 'S2. McGregor 'SO, an active member at the C., April 9-10. Miss Lucile R. Collins '10 of the present time; Mrs. Bradley Phillips '81; Mrs. C. C. Lyford 'S2; Ida Mann Dr. Jackson presented a. report as Minneapolis Journal was appointe~ to chairman of the committee on anatom­ give a report of all future meetmgs 'S5; Mrs. Frank Webster 'S7; Mrs. W. W. Morse '88; Lydia Stroheier '89; ical nomenclature. Dean cammon to the Minnesota Alumni Weekly. Un­ gave three d mon trations on anatom til the next meeting, Mrs. Isabelle l\irs. George Selover 'S9; Jlrlrs. Morton M. Cross '9l. ical subjects during the meeting. Welles Gray '95 was made temporary Other demonstrations were presented chairman, and Miss Ruth F. Cole '02 Esther Friedlander '92; Mrs. J. C. by Dr. Edith Boyd, Dr. laude 1\1 temporary secretary. Sweet '93; Mrs. Frank M . Anderson Gerde , Dr. Edward Boyden, Dr. A Because the new organization was '94; Maud Case '95; Mrs. Edward T. Rasmussen, Dr. R. A. Schwegler, Jr. W. D. Holway '96; Mrs. Albert B. expected, by its nature, to work close­ and Herbert WaH Loye '97; Elizabeth Foss '99 and still ly with the office of the Dean of Wo­ active; Profes or Lillian Cohen '00, also men, Dean Margaret Sweeney poke a member this year. to the group of fifty on what such a Lectrlre Announced club could do to help the women of Mrs. Samuel E. Sweitzer '01; Helen The Christian Science organization the University. It was stressed that Fish '02, another charter member still on the campus announce a. free Iectur~ the work of the club as yet unnamed active in the organization; Mrs. John on hristian cien e by Charles V. would be that not covered by thc Gen­ W. Wilkins '01 sti)) enrolled on mem­ Winn, C. S. B., of Pasadena., Calif., ill eral Alumni association or the various bership lists; Mrs. E. M. Pennock 'os, Burton lIall auditorium on Iond3~ college associations. a member at present. evening, pril 13, at S o'clock. The On March 14, although the members Jlrlrs. L. F . Carpenter '06; Helen university public and alumni are cor· met as yet under no name, the group Lovell '07; Edith Rockwood '09; Mrs. dially invited. Mr. Winn is a member was organized. Held in Shevlin hall, Charles Patek '10; Marjorie Knappen of thc Board of Lecture hip of Thl' the meeting was attended by one '11; Mrs. Laurence Plank '12; and Mrs. 10ther Church, the First Church of hundred alumnae. A. H. Isbelle '!!t. hrist, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. APRIL 11, 1936 457

The refinancing of Hasey-Erickson ference regulations were originally mortgage ($2,600) by acceptance of drafted to fit the traditional four-year Directors' Meeting $2,537.70 in full ettlement wa unani­ college curriculum and that the lan­ mou Iy approved and the receiving of guage of the Conference bad not been Minutes of the Meeting $2,500 HOLC 2';4 % bonds therefor, changed to meet changing conditions. Therefore, certain adju tments would of the into principal account at par, showing principal 10 of $62.30, and waiving of have to be made. He al 0 made it Board of Directors of the General interest since January 26, 1935. clear that the admini tration had Alumni As ociation It was moved, econded and unani­ nothing to fear from an investigation Tuesday, March 3, 1936 mously approved that HOLC bonds be of the General College. i\Iinnesota Union accepted for face of Todd loan with 5. Financial situation.-1h. Gibon intere t to cIo ing date if the loan is pointed out that the finances of the Members pre ent: ~Irs . Avery, :l\1iss allowed. Association were still in the black and Inglis, Mr. Wheeler, Mesrs. Arny, It wa moved, seconded and carried were likely to remain so to the end of Bull, Godward, Keye ,Martin, etz, that Federal financing for 675 be ac­ the year, that adverti ing had been Otto, Parker, Peterson, Pierce, afford, cepted in full settlement of Pust loan difficult to secure up to the first of the hellman, hepard, Tupa, and Zelle. if loan could be secured. year, but that the incrca e in that Others pre ent: Wm. S. Gib on, editor Acceptance of 75 note due in field at the present time as compared of the Alumni Weekly, F. W. Peck, 11arch, 1986 was approved, to be ap­ with that of last year was gratifying. fonner member of the board, Stanley plied on principal of Wurdeman prin­ Gilla.m, alumni repre entative on the cipal. Alumni Meetings Minnesota Union Board, and Fred It was moved, seconded and unani­ Hovde, member of the alumni athletic mou Iy carried that the acceptance of 6. Alumni meetings and coming committee. ix month intere t due January I, 1936 events.-The ecretary mentioned the on the 1,000 t. Augu tine bond be ap­ following alumni activitie that had oc­ Item.s of Bu.siness proved, said intere t being paid at the curred since the la t Board meeting: rate of 50c on the dollar. Approval October ll-Dmaha (Lincoln game) The following item of busines were wa given to join in the refunding plan October 25 - Homecoming; Alumni pre ented for di 'cus 'ion and action wa pre ented if and when it eemed ad­ taken as indicated: dinner, ad"isory committee lun­ visable to the Treasurer to do 0, and cheon, medical alumni luncheon 1. Mi7lutes of the meeting of Oc­ authority given to cash pa t due cou­ October 27-Durham, N. H. (First re­ tobeT I, 1935.-The minutes of the pons at 40 after 90 days or at 50 any­ meeting of October I, 1935, were ap­ union of l\Iinne ota alumni at Dur­ time. ham) proved a' printed in the Weekly of It was moved, econded and unani­ December 14. November 15-Detroit, Mich. (foot­ mou ly carried that the Trea urer end ball) 2. Minutes of the meeting of the ex­ remittance to redeem taxes in the n1ur­ Xovember 29--New York (Thanksgiy­ ecutive eommittee.-~Ir. Martin, chair­ phy land for 1930 and through the ing Tea at Levon We 1's tudio) man of the executive committee pre­ first half of 1985, amounting to 175.81, sented the following minutes of the same to be taken from Principal fund December &-Chicago ("ictory foot­ mceting held February 24 at the of the A ociation. ball dinner) Farmers & 1echanic Bank. January l-Schenectady (,\lurnni en­ After discu ion, it wa moved, ec­ tertained at home of hlr. and l\Ir . Moved, seconded, and carried that onded and unanimou Iv carried that in the e minute be approved. Burt Newkirk • Tew Year' after­ regard to the offer of 1,000 for the noon) nelling land. a letter be sent to the January 3-8t. LOlli, )10. Executive Committee agent tating that we would con ider January 18-Waseca an offer of 1,200 with '~50 ca hand January 15-Red Wing Upon motion made, seconded and the balance on satisfactory term . duly carried, the purchase of the fol­ January 22-Wa hington, D. C. En­ lowing ecuritie was approved: Upon motion made, seconded and gineers 3,000 Federal Farm Mortgage 3% unanimously approved, it wa ordered January 24--Roche ter that 1\Ir. H. . Kingman be authorized due 1949/H @ 100 22/82 (Cost January ~7-11r. Wilkin's birthday 3,021.62) . to ign check.. upon the A. ociation party $3,000 t. Paul Mpls. Manitoba 5% Account which l\Ir. Wallace ha been Februar . 17-Albert Lea authorized to sign, such authorization, due 19·13, Callable various dates @ however, to be limited to the period of 7 . .LL1 and the Futllre.-~Ir. Frank 1071f2 plus $1 Exp. ($3,226.00). "'. Peck, former member of the Board $'2,000 t. Paul Mpls. 1anitoba. 5% 1\lr. Wallace' ab ence from the city. viz. March I t to May lOth, 1936 .. of Director, and chairman of the execu­ due 1943, @ 1071f2 plus $1.86 (Co t tin committee, recent Iv returned from 3. Minnesota Uni~n.-l\lr. tanley $2,151.36) . "'a hington, D. ., ga~' e II mo t inter­ $2,000 Mc racken Co. Ky. Rd. & Br. Gillam, alumni representative on tl;e Board of Governor of the l\Iinuesotn e ting and enlightening talk on the vari­ 5% due 1948 @ 4% ba is ( o't Oll governmental acti\'itie_ in relation $2,200.79) . luon, reported an increu e in tile uc­ ti\·itie of that bouy and commented to agriculture. He gave the member $1.000 Bell o. Texas Rd. & Br. 43,.,1,% of the Boaru a close-up of the per'on­ due 1956 @ 4.25 ba is. mo t favorably upon the attitude and active intere t on the part of members ali ties invoh-ed in the New Deal Pro­ The sale of the following wa unal1i­ gram relating to agriculture und e'(­ mouJy approved: of the Board in devising method, of contributing to the tudent welfare. plained the new sy tem of sub-idit" $3,000 Ontario for con~eryation of oil fertility. The (Cost ... $3,246.69) @ $8,800.00 4 ..-lthldics.-Fred Hoyue, member member of the Board were profoundly $1,000 Ontario of thc athletic committee of the Gen­ interested in and highly plea ed with (Co t ... 1,088.75) @ 1,087.50 rfal ,\ll1nmi", ociation. commented on ~Ir. Pcck" analysis or the situation. the recent publicity given the General $1,285.44 $4,337.50- College in connection with eligibility :i\Ieeting adjourneu. or gain to Prin. of $52.06. matter. He pointed out that the Con- E. B. Pierce, ecrctary 458 THI: MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

Iildred Nelon secretarie for the Girl Music in Ch ina Re erves at Bartle ville, Okla., while HEN the horal Society Phillis argent i in Glover ·ville. N . Y., Women W of Shanghai, China. pre­ with the couls. sented the cantata, "lliawatha," Whi per Merle Potter . . . ~Iinne- in Shanghai on March 24 and otan Gale ondergaard '23. has a UEST day at the Minneapolis In­ 25, the leads in the prodllctil}n prominent part in "Anthony Adverse" G stitute of Arts is April 18 for the were taken by a British barito1le, ... takes respite from her dutie at Alumnae Club member. Edmund a Russian tenor a nd an A meri­ the studio by pulting on a pair of Kopietz speaks on "Contemporary can soprano. The soprano was a kii and eoa ·ting around the now Art." On May ~ members will play former Minnesotan . Lucile T . decked mountains of California. cards. the proceed to go toward Graham, a daughter of Byron ll. Dr. Ruth Boynton. chairman of the a scholarship fund. At the final Timberlake '91, of Minneapolis . government and child welfare depart­ meeting on June 15, the alumni lunch­ Mrs. Graham has been li ing ment of the linnesota League of eon in the Minnesota Union, "Our in China for the past 20 yeaTS Women Voters. mel with the tudcnt First Grads" wil1 be honored. and has been active ill 'various group of the league organized under educational projects. Two years the name of the ollege League of Weddings ago she was one of the moving Women Voter. who met recently at force$ behind the organiza.tion of the College of t. Catherine. Pre-nuptial affairs for Jane Van the Shanghai Choral CllLb, an Mrs. {abeth Hurd Paige. m ~ mber Sant, married March 14 to Harold association which no'w includes of the house of representatives in l\1in­ Benjamin Hargrove, numbered a bridge in its membership, talented l1W­ ne ota, spoke on citizenship and good party by Elinor White, a dinner by sician~ of all nationalities. government before the Fifth Di trict Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Hamlet (Charlotte Federation of Women's clubs in lin­ Granger) of Brainerd and a shower by quils dotted the room. Mrs. Helen neapoli recently. Mary Gram. Hamilton named the King Cole hotel Ruth L. teverson, former journalism Betty Durant and Gwen Bee ley be­ as the spot for a luncheon recently. tudent, teaching journali m and Eng­ gan April showers for Mary Edward, Classmates Virginia Porter, Barbara lish in the R. A. Long High chool. whose marriage to Leonard ampson Bruce and {argaret Jean LaLone held Longview. W3.!;h., touched points we t will take place May ~, with a party at a luncheon and mi cel1aneou shower in Japan, hina, and lhe Philippine which towels, mats, and what-not in April 4 at the LaLone home. Ii_ I land during her ummer vacation. bathroom furnishings were the pre­ Chi Omega Founder' Day lipped LaLone wiIJ be a bridesmaid. ferred gifts .... Mary I ves and Ardene by la t Monday with Katherine Bau­ Marion lve and Peggy Watt shared Berg were hostesses at a shower l\{arch man on the arrang ment committee hostess honors at a recent handkerchief 31. April ~~ had two circles drawn for the dinner at the urli hotel. around it on Miss Edward's calendar hower for Mi Reinhard. The bridal dinner will be given by Mrs. Brooke The choo ing of the alumnae dele­ as Mrs. JDhn Van Nest wiIJ be hostess April 17 at the Woman's club. The gate to the national cOD\'ention wa the at a luncheon and hosiery hower, and wedding rehear al will follow . main topic of immediate bu. ine for at the Minikahda club Mrs. Charles the Alpha Phi who met .\pril 1 at Van Nest and her daughters, Mrs. luncheon with Ir . Paul II. Dunna­ H. H. Reinhard, Jr., Flagstaff, Ariz., Short Short Stories van. lrs. Paul W. Lalham talked 011 and Mrs. Morden McCabe of Winnipeg Isabelle Alexander 'S6Gr spends a "Prints." Nancy King of t Paul share hostess honors. Mrs. Reinhard few weeks YWCA-ing before leaving wil\ be delegate for the nctiye chapler and Mrs. McCabe, cousins of Miss Ed­ for Winnipeg April 15 to take up her to the Alpha Phi convention which wil\ wards, will be attendants at the wed­ duties as general ecretary of the take place at Iackinac I land June ding. Young Women's Chri tian Association 22-27. Four parties dot the calendar of for Winnipeg. Miss Alexander is a Mary Noreen Dea, who will be mar­ graduate in science and in home eco­ CRANBROOK SCHOOL ried Saturday, April 18, to Philip B. nomics from the University of Mani­ Distinctive endowed boys' school. grades 7-12 and post-graduate Gamble'S6. April 14, Mary Ann Kelly toba and spent some time with the course. Arts, sciences, athletics, wiIJ be hostess at luncheon. The after­ extension service of the l\Ianitoba de­ hobbies. Non-military. Single rooms. Near Detroit. noon of April 16 will be taken up by partment of agriculture. Before com­ For Catalog Address a shower given by Marguerite Luger. ing to the University of Minnesota for Regietrar Rosemary Coleman and Helen Foley graduate work, he wa director of the 3010 Lon e Pine Road will give a luncheon during Miss Cole­ Women's Home bureau for the province B loom1leld K Ws lIIichlgan man's vacation from St. Mary college, of Alberta. Notre Dame, Ind. Lillian Lee Love 'S5Gr is Dean Love Kitchenware was showered on the to students at Northern tate Teachers bride-to-be April 2 at a party given College at Aberdeen. S. D., where she 1n!siern Eltctric by Katherine Maroney. . . . Saturday, holds the office of dean of women. Leaden in April 4, Ardene Berg of the Leaming­ Mrs. Howard Hornung, Detroit, na­ ound T ransmission A p paratus ton hotel gave a luncheon at the hotel. tional first vice president of Delta Zeta Showers, teas, and luncheons preced­ sorority, wa guest of honor at a Della ed the marriage of Betty Reinhard and Zeta reception following the alumnae Frank R. Brooke on April 18. A meeting recently. Mrs. Hornung an­ trousseau tea was given March Sl by nounced plans for the national conven­ AREERS IN INSURANCE FOR Mrs. Reinhard, with Margaret Jean tion to be held in Asheville, N. ., from LaLone and Maxine Brooke, and June 29 to July 3. COlLEGE GRADUATES ~ Mmes. James L. Pause, W. J. Fergu­ Working with the young girls of the NATIONAl Q1!3 son, K. R. Ferguson, G. E. Brooke and Girl Scout and Y.W.C.A.'s Girl Re­ COLLEGIATE PERSONNEL BUREAU E. M. Gegenheimer alternating at the serve organization are Phill is Sargent °rhc Pcnn Mutual Lift.' Insurance CompJlny tea tables. White hyacinths and jon- '~6Ed and Mildred C. Nel on '26. I nd~pcndcncc Square • Philadelphia APRIL 11 , 1936 459

Brownjan Movement in Colloids with Jewish Women, presided recently at an * * * * * a new photo-effect obtained on some interstate conference of the council at fine ilver particles at the recent Phil­ an Franci co. he also vi ited the Brief Notes About adelphia meeting on microscopy. It aliforrua Pacific International Expo­ was sponsored by the Optical Society ition in an Diego. Minnesota Alumni of America. 1907 12,000 MInnesotans read thIs de­ Dr. F. Koren 'OlMd of Watertown, partment each week tor news ot S. D ., ha returned from a vacation of ~frs. Ethel Woodward, wife of Her­ frIends ot Co liege days. everal weeks in New York City. bert S. Woodward '07L left in March for a six weeks' trip to Califorrua where 1880 1903 he will visit Mr. and Mrs. E. Ray­ George Dougla Mann '03, publi her mond Woodward of Pasadena and 1\1r. Mr . ugu ta Perkin Gillette 'SOEx, of the Bismarck Tribune for twenty­ and l\fr . John C. Woodward of Bev­ a charter memher of Kappa Kappa two years, elied at Orlando, Fla., after erly Hill. She will ee friends and Gamma, died ~1arch 12 at the horne a long illne s, ':\larch 26, at the age of relatives in Los Angeles, and will spend of her daughter, frs. Donald R. Cot­ 66. a month at Lompoc, Calif., the home ton of Minneapoli . he wa the wid­ He wa born June S, lS79, at Gode­ of her daughter, :\1rs. Robert Hibbitts. ow of the late George ~1. Gillette, and rich, Ontario, the on of Frederick R. :\1r . Henry S. Kingman of Lake ~fin­ a member of the board of directors of and Mary Wood worth :\olann. netonka, sister-in-law of tls. Wood­ ~orthwe tern hospital, Minneapolis. In lSS1 hi parent moved to t. ward, entertained at clinner in her he \IIa born in Belle Plaine, 1inn., Paul where he attended school and honor prior to her departure. En route but pent mo. t of her life in the Twin graduated from the Univer ity in '03, home, fr. Woodward will vi it her itie . where he eli tinguished rumseU de pite mother, frs. Fred R. Warren, at Lew­ 1889 the fact that he had to work out ide i ton. Mont. Their on, Warren 1. Woodward, was in l\lontana earlier in 01. larence oe ' 9E, who com- of chool hours. While in school he worked at odd the year, while en route to Juneau. manded the 17th railway engineers in Alaska, where he ha been offered a France during the World War, i eli­ time for the t. Paul Pioneer Pre and later obtained a teady job with po ition by the AJa ka-Juneau Goln trict manager for the PWA in Miami, ~1ining company. Fla., and in charge of the hou ing divi- that paper. He wa oon the tar ion. The P\,y.\ i building 243 hou e political commentator for the Pres, 1908 and was ent to cover many .tate and -about a million dollar worth of "alter J. Ge ell '0 , who ha been work. Col. oe report that the con­ national conventions. In '06 he accepted an offer to be­ a ociated with the ruted Saving~ tractor for the job, Robert Butler '19, bank of Detroit a mortgage loan of­ was a former football player. come editor of the ~linot Optic. a predeces or of the pre ent .Minot Daily ficer ince January 1, 1935, has re­ 1890 New. cently been promoted to the po ition of It wa at this period that he home­ a i tant "ice pre ident in charge of Iajor Edgar l\1. Dunn '90Gr, for­ teaded a farm in Ward county. living mortgage loans. The ruted aving mer prole or at Hamline univer ity, on the property wrule continuing with bank has contributed the largest vol­ joined the taft of the Goodwill Indu - his new paper work. ume of FHA mortgage in the tate of trie of Minneapoli recently to begin In '10 he returned to t. Paul a ~1i chi gan. a urvey of these indu trie which ha political eelitor of the Di patch. In Rewey Belle Inglis 'OS, head of the broadened the heltered work hop 'IS he wa appointed city eelitor of that woman' occupational bureau and chief project for the re-education and re­ newspaper. cataloguer at the public library of habilitation of the phy ically handi­ He accepted editor hip of the Bi - :\Iinneapoli . make plans for a June capped. He wa formerly a. ociated marck Tribune, North Dakota' olde t voyage Europe-bound with England as with mining and chemical companie in new paper in '14, going there hortly her chief objective. various section of the country. after the outbreak of the World War. 1912 1897 1904 George Wykoff '1!l is regional di- Dr. harles N. pratt '97 is new rector of the NYA (national youth ad­ Archibald R. Gibbons '04 died at hi mini tration), for Minne ota. president of Eitel hospital taff, l'1inne­ horne in Bronxville, N. Y., on larch apoli. Dr. and 1'1r . pratt and their S. He i survived by hi wife and 1913 daughter Ruth spent pring vacation mother. Dr. T . C. Davi 'lSMd, for the third taking a three-week' trip through the Frank R. Pingry '04 attended the outh. Dr. pratt addres ed medical year, i named pre ident of the Com­ eventy-fifth anniver ry of Pingry merce as ociation of Wadena. ~1inn. meeting at Louisville. "a.hville and chool, Elizabeth. N. J ., a preparatory Atlanta. school for boys founded by his grand­ Jame II. Linton '97 died July 10. 1914 father, on March !l0. Dr. George E. Gladys Harrison '14, who ha been 1934, at 2422 Fifth treet we t, ~e at­ Vincent. former pre ident of the Uni­ tIe, Wa h. a member of President Roo evelt's versity of l\1inne ota, and a graduate brain tru t, working on the legal taft from Pingry chool in 'Sl . was sched­ 1898 of the A.A~~ ., who earned a degree uled to speak but wa unable to at­ from law chool at Yale after a B.A. Dr. E . P. Quain '9Sl\1d, of Bi marck. lend on account of illne s. The pres­ . D., a phyician widely travelled. i. and more graduate work here, ha ent headma ter, Charle B. Newton, ailed for Porto Rico. he i sent to writing up experiences for a book on wa. headrna ter of Blake chool, 1in­ outh \ merica. neapoli from 190 to 1911. work in the Porto Rican R econ.truc­ tion Admiru tration, and her addre s 1901 1906 i an J uan. In linneapoli llL Rar­ ri on wa a member of the M inne ota Reinhard . Wetzel '01 of New York .Mrs. Arthur Brin '06 of Minneapolis. League of Women Voter . made a motion picture showing of the pre ident of the National Council of Dr. A. F . Bratrud '14l\1d was guest 4060 THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI W EEKLY

peaker from Minneapolis at the annual finn., and an eight weeks' tour or meeting of the Aberdeen, S. D ., di - Mexico and the we t coa t. trict medical society. Faculty Profiles Esther Wil on '26 is lahoratory tech­ nician in the niver ity of linnesota 1915 botany department. AROLD R. BENJAMIN, perfectly un­ Leslie R. Olsen '15C of linneapolis H pedantic assistant dean of the col­ visited his mother in l\Ionrovia, Calif., lege of education, did not learn rope­ 1927 last summer, before attending the an­ throwing, which he use to demonstrate Verna M . arson '27Ed teaches nual convention of the American asso­ educational principles sometimes, as a cow­ boy-although he was onc--but by work­ why's and wherefore's of equilateral ciation of cereal chemists with Mr . ing as "rigger slinger," th boss of salt­ triangles to North St. Paul geometry Olsen. They then drove back to Min­ water fi hing crews, between school terms students, and also ha cla es in history neapolis with Dr. '25Gr. and Mrs. R. of Pacific University. (He won't fish the Dr. Nora Winther '27 lei, gynecolo­ C. Sherwood. tamer Minne ota kind, now.) gist at the niversity. repeated her Theodore C. Blegen '15Gr edit the IIis riding on Oregon ranches, also a lecture which she had given for the letters of Colonel Hans Chri tian Heg, vacation job, led him into the cavalry. Iinneapoli ouncil of Federated civil war colonel, in a new book ju t In Iexico against Villa in 1916, he was Church Women at the Citizens Aid off the press. cavalryman in the Second Division during building in Minneapolis. the 'World War. Aloin the army of 1916 occupation, he was invited to serve in the Dr. '16 and Mrs. Henry M. Lee and Poli h army against the oviets. Declin­ 1928 their family of Minneapolis will return ing, he returned to Leland tanford. get­ ting a B.A. in 1920. Ir. '28L and irs. John C. Arko a few days after Easter from Pasadena, (Ruth A. Williams) will be at home in After serving as superintendent of a Calif., where they are vi iting relative. mall Oregon school, he was appointed Virginia, Minn., where Mr. Arko was principal of the Oregon University High recently appointed assi tant t. Louis 1917 &hool in 1922. Five more years of study county attorn y, after a trip through at the niversity of Michigan and Leland California and other southern tate . Dr. Edwin O. Swanson '17Md, who tan ford brought him a Ph.D. degree from Pre ent at the marriage were l\1r. '33 died Monday, March SO, in Sl. Paul, tanford. and Mrs. Frank R. Arko (Gladyce wa born in Brainerd, J\1inn., and grad­ He lectured here the next year, and then 01 on 'S2N, 'S3Ed). uated from the high school there. After became assi tant dean of the college of his interneship at Ancker ho pital in ed ucation when Dean IIaggerty left to do 1919, he began practice in St. Paul. re earch . 1930 During the World war he was a li eu­ IIe always teaches at least one class. be­ Ir. 'SO and Mr . William A. Swan­ tenant in the medical corps. ("au e he wants to. Likes best the field berg (Dorothy E . reen '30Ed) . who. I.' Dr. Swanson was a member of the of comparative education, and learned marriag took place March 21 in hi­ Ramsey county and American Iedical much about foreign schools in fexico and cago, left immediately after their wed­ societies, the St. Paul Athletic club, in Germany where he often visited classes ding for New York ity where they Dayton's Bluff post of the American while with the army of occupation . Is in­ terested in what happens to education dur­ will make lheir home. Legion and the Brainerd Ma onic ing and after revolution. lIe was honored John A. Grill 'SOEx. former rooter lodge. He is survived by his wife, four in 193! by being named one of two dele­ king nt the niver ity, i named ex­ brothers and two sisters. gates from the United States-which has ecutive manager of the Greater North­ Dr. G. M . Constance '17Md wa no minister of education-to the Pan­ wesl As ociation, Inc., formed last elected new vice president at the sixth American education conference in Chile. summer to promote sport events and district medical society meeting. Dr. other amu ements. He will have his Constance is from Bismarck, N. D. offices at 1126 Harmon place, J\1inne­ Mr. '17E and Mrs. George Fossen of 1924 apoli . Since it incorporation the or­ Chicago had as guests Mrs. Fos en's ganization has spon ored bicycle races Dr. C. E. Alexander '2~Md, chief brother and sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. and the appearance of Admiral Byrd Carl Waldron of Minneapolis, en route of obstetrics at St. Luke's hospital, Duluth, died in February in tbat hos­ with the P. T. A. child welfare or­ to a conference in Louisville, Ky. ganization. Mr. Grill returned recently pital, following a head injury received in a fall. He was born and educated from Omaha, where he studied the or­ ganization and activitie of the Knights 1920 in Minneapolis. of Ak-Sar-Ben, a similar promotional Dr. Hogbert Rice '20Md moves from 1926 organization of that city. Thief River Fall , Minn., to Moorhead, Lucille Leighton 'SOB will be married Minn., after purchasing the practice of Mr. '26B and Ir. Donald L. Wil­ lo Rus ell Niles Beck of Atchison, the late Dr. H. J . Thornby. liams (Catherine Klotz 'S4G) make Kans., May 9, according to cheduled Carl A. Johnson '20L, Blue Earth bon-voyage preparations for sailing wedding plans, in St. Andrew Epi co­ county attorney at Mankato, Minn., April 18 to Buenos Aires whcre they pal church. Mis Leighton is a mem­ since 19S0, is filing for the office of will make their home for several years. b r of Delta Delta Delta orority. Mr attorney-general. He is a resident of Mr. and Mrs. Williams left in March Beck is a graduate of the college of Lake Crystal, Minn. from Minneapolis for Palm Beach, Fla .• chemical engineering, University of from where they will sail for South Kansas. 1921 America. Helen Jean Van Nest 'SOEd will Mr. '21L and Mrs. Clinton M. Odell Manele Kee '26, now l\Irs. . M . leave music supervi ing at Gettysburg. are back home in Minneapolis after Wells, is making her home at Anchor­ S. D., high chool, to become irs five weeks pent in Punta Gorda, Fla. age, Alaska. She was formerly as­ Louis V. Thompson of Pierre, S. D., Dr. '21Md and Mrs. Iyron O. Henry sistant librarian at the . S. National dale unannounc d. Mr. Thompson, a returned recently from an 18-day cruise In titute of Health. Washington, D. graduate of Iowa tale ollege. i stale in the West Indies and South America, Mr. and Mrs. Wells have just returned supervisor of country agents of oulh landing in New York on board the to Alaska aIter a Chri lmas vi it with Dakota. Miss Van Nest, a gradunte Kungsholm. Mr. and Mrs. George Kees in St. Paul, of the music department of the uni - APRIL 11 , 1936 461 versity, is a member of Alpha Delta Pi orority. Mr. Thompson is a member of Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. Archer E. randall '30Ex, Sigma A New Course in Adult Education \lpha Epsilon, will be married to ar­ olyn Allen, who has attended Carleton College and Miss Wood's. chool, early in J une. Miss Allen i at present SUMMER STUDY teacbing at taples, finn. 1931 In Vacationland Mi. '31Ex and Mrs. John Plank Enjoy the scenic beauties and recreational delights ot the land of ten (Carol Pettitt 'S2Ex) are in Wales thousand lakes while studying next summer. Minneapolis is the gateway to one ot the Nation's greatest summer playgrounds. where ~lr . Plank gets hi name in lighb before Welsh theatres a "Johnny Bry­ ant." They went abroad in August and opened in Edinburgh eptember l. • ince then the v have been in Dublin and London. 'Later they will go to Graduate Courses for Teachers Denmark, and will return to ~Iinne­ with New Master's Degree for Course Work Only apolis in early summer to visit .Mr~ . Plank's parent, l'Ir. and ~1rs. H. V. at the Pettitt al their lodge at Bovey, film. Beulah Lar on '3lEd of linne- UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA apoli I fl for a e,'eral week.' visit These courses include Adult Education, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, with friend . in Lo Angeles and Po­ Mathematics, Sociology, Child Welfare, Industrial Education. Public mona, Cali£. Health, Home Economics, Physical Education, Play Production, ~usic Alice J. Canright '3lGr will leave 'ind many others. Full credit toward Baccalaureate or Ad,'anced De­ her po ition at Iowa tate ollege grees is given for summer work in all courses. r ew courses in the .. . though he doe n't say when, aIter of Wa hington, D. ., who took General College. All departments, laboratories and research facilities graduate work at Iowa late. l\1i~ are open and at your service during the summer. Canright, who e home i in Fairmont. :'Ilinn., i a graduate of Carleton 01- lege. 1\1r. Eagl graduated from • • -orth arolina tate college. TWO TERMS 1932 June IS·July 2S July 2S-August 29 Dr. Dean meek '32 1d is medical officer at the .. . camp of Blue Ridge, Ga., planning to practice on the we t con t later. Exceptional Advantages Villa l\1ary En blom '32Ag was only 250 Selected Educators attendant at the wedding of her sister, Helen Enblom, who married James T. Special Lectures Haye Thur -day, March 26. Plays and Excursions Dr. '32 1d and Ir . Corrin Hodg on 600 Courses (Florence Pitman '29Ed) and Ir. '28L A Great Reference Library and 1\1rs. Robert Hyslop (Catherine Advanced Degrees Baker '28Ed) were gue t from Fer­ Moderate Fees gu Fall, Minn., at the wedding of Low Living Costs ~Iargar t Thorne Wright and Wilbur :\Iark el on of l\1inneapoli on April 3. A Suggestion .. . Helen Druley 'S2Ed, '35Gr h8 been appointed art upervi or of the t. You may lInd it convenient t o enroll for t he second t erm a f ter returuJDg' Cloud chools, and art in tructor in from the !f.E.A. Convention a t Portland, Oregon. the bigh school. Dr. Ralph R ossen 'S2l\I d and l\Ir . Rossen (Beatrice R uth Cohen) are be­ • coming acquainted with taff members Write for Complete Bulletin at l. Peter tate ho pital \,h re Dr. Director of Summer Seaaion, Ro. se n, formerly at the niversity hos­ Dept. Al pital, \\'a named a ,i,tant head to Dr. George Freeman. They nre making their home in the doctor' quarter. UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 'Ir. R o sen formerly attended lhe Minneapolis, Minn. Univer ity and i a graduate of Mac­ Phai l dramatic ehool. 46~ THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

1933 chanical Ballyhoo' for the Mechanicals Syneva Martin '35Ag and William Jo ephine K. Fontaine '33Ex an­ of 1934 published." Bevan '36 trust best-man Vernal nounces to Pi Phi sisters her engage­ Ruth Scofield '34Ag, A. O. Pi, and (Babe) Le Voir to bring the ring ment to Richard McNurlen. She has G. Clair Armstrong '33Ex say "I do" safely to the marriage ceremony at S1. just returned from a southern trip with April 25 at lhe Scofield home. ir. Mary's Episcopal church, also April her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Clif­ Harold L. Wilson (Grace Scofield IS . ii Martin will have as only ford Van Storm. '31Ag) will be matron of honor and attendant her cou in La Verne Foster Evangeline Kitto '33Ed is teaching Helen Armstrong maid of honor. Don­ '36AgEd. Responsible for several pre­ for the second year at Tower, Minn. ald Isenberger has been cho en best nuptial affair and howers were Bertha The wife of Francis T. Brady '33Ag, man, Elvin T . Christman usher. Irwin and Laurice Ru sell who held a luncheon and shower recently, Irs. assistant county agent at Fairmont, 1935 Minn., died recently in Duluth. She Richard Hutchin on (Jo ephine Pea e) , attended Villa Schola tica. Golfer Charles (Pat) awyer '35G the bride's cousins, Mis e LaVerne Elmer Vaurio '33Gr i in tructor in and Mary Kay Ives '36Ex et Easter and Marie Foster, and Mrs. Eug ne science in the University high school, ionday, April 13, as the date on which 01 on (Dorothy Jane Gould). announces the bureau of recommenda­ they say "I do." Evelyn Johann en '35Ex and Clifford tions. Leading name on the Ii t of bridal Peterson 'S~E choo e fay 2 for the attendants . .. Jane Elizabeth Wright date of their marriage. They will 1934 '35, maid of honor. Bridesmaids des­ make their home in Pipe tone, Minn. Evylin Seeley '34 and E. Theodore ignated are Marion Ives '35, Marlys Ward Randall, Jr. 'S5Gr and David Johnson '32 will march to wedding Hanson '34, and Audrey Ive, junior Evans '35Gr, Beta Theta Pi fraternity strains May 26. The wedding will take bridesmaid. Mr. Sawyer has selected members, have been enjoying the sun­ place at the home of Mrs. W. F. Fit­ William T. Boutell '36 as best man, shine of California this winter where terling, Minneapolis, grandmother of and hi two brother , Richard and they are enrolled a students in the Miss Seeley, whose home was al 0 the Walter Sawyer, and Henry Knoblauch Boeing chool of Aeronautic at Oak· scene of the wedding of Miss Seeley' '35C and Otis Dypwick '34UC as land, Calir., in the operations cour e. parents. After their marriage they will ushers. P. G. McGill, Jr., '35L began hi live at Beaver Dam, Wis. court career by successfully defending Miss Seeley names Mrs. Roger O. an Indian charged with first degree Lindquist (Helen Johnson), iter of murder. The defendant wa acquitted the bridegroom - elect, as matron of Campus Events by a jury in federal court at uperior, honor at her marriage. Maid of honor Wis. will be Marion Seeley. Dr. Lindqui t Dr. Winslon L. Lee '35D opened of­ April 16 fices in Fergus Fall , l\1inn., Durrell has been named as best man. CONVOCATION- Walter Millis, New York Leo J. Kujawa '34E has recently block, the first of the year. Herald-Tribune, "The Martial Spirit." Violet J. Helander '35 i employed left the sales department of the Gulf Northrop Auditorium-ll: 30 a. m. Oil corporation of Pennsylvania in UNIVERSITY THEATRE - "Hay Fever" by at t. Luke' hospital, Fergus Fall~ , Hartford, Conn., to become per onnel Toel Coward . Music Auditorium-8:30 Minn. director of the Luscombe Airplane De­ p. m. $.75. Margaret mith 'S.5Ed i instructor velopment corporation at Trenton, April 17 of nurse al Enid general hospital. N . J . He says that he expects to be MINNEAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA - OR­ Enid, Oklahoma. chestral Program. Northrop Auditorium Homeward bound ar the European joined by other Minne ota graduates. --8:30 p. m. $1 , $2, $3. Gladys A. Wallene '34E, who ends travelers Belly Ann Davi '36Ex, who UNIVERSITY THEATRE - "IIay Fever" by lop in Indianapolis for a visit en in her change of address a 17] 14 Noel Coward. Music Auditorium-8: 30 l. Ernadale avenue N. W ., Cleveland, 0 ., p. m. $.75 . route to Paul, and Marion Iv '35 from her former address of 1425 Wagar April 18 who i already in Iinneapoli . avenue, Lakewood, 0 ., writes: "I have UNTVERSITY THEATRE--"Hay Fever" by But Mia G i t '35, touring Haly with seen quite a few Minnesota alumni Noel Coward . Music Auditorium-8: 30 Mary Jane onfer '35 , expects to re­ since I have been home. Lee Fischer p. m. $.75 . turn to the Univer ·ity of Munich and '34E was here for a few hours la t BASEBALL - Minnesota vs. Gustavus will remain abroad during the summer Adolphus. -3: 00 p. m. Mis Confer will journey to pain and fall. He was on his way back from UO. Canada. George Taylor '34E was here England from Italy and will return SIGMA XI LECTURE - "A New Era in home in May. She tudied at the Sor­ last fall while looking over the Wood­ Science" by W. F. G. Swann, Bartol In­ ward Governors on our engines (his stitute in Philadelphia, formerly of the bonne with Miss Day, making the trip company manufactures them). Lois University of Minnesota. Northrop over with her. Swanstrom '35Ag was in Cleveland for Auditorium-8: 15 p. m. Frances Gilman '35Ed enjoy a a month last fall. She is taking April 19 Florida vacation as the immediRte MINNEAPOLIS SYMPUONY ORCHESTRA­ aftermath of graduation winter quar­ dietetic work in Dayton. One month "Pop" Concert. Northrop Auditorium- of this training is given in Cleveland. ler. She left by motor with her mother 3: 30 p. m. $.25 and $.50. and brother, Clark, a sophomore at We visited Oberlin together. I missed April 21 Lonie Vrooman '34E and his wife the niver ity, to be gone three weeks. BASEBALL - Minnesota vs. River Falls John W. Heyer '35Ag is working for when I was in Chicago for Thanksgiv­ Teachers College. Northrop Field-8: 00 ing. They were in Minneapolis. After p. m. $.40. an M .S. a assistant in the depart­ the first of the year they were trans­ April n ment of horticulture at Wa hington ferred to Kansas. I do not have their NEWSREEL THllATRE--Five showings be­ tate College, Pullman, Wa h. new address. Bob Sweiven '35E is ginning at 12: SO p. m. Northrop Audi­ Georgine Davenport '35 wa house torium-$.05. wilh the Carrick Engineering company guest of Mr. '34 and Mrs. Walter L. April 23 Hass (Jeanne O. Belair) at their home in Michigan City, Ind. CONVOCATION-Colonel Ralph II. Isham, "This letter ha rambled along more "Romance of Lawrence of Arabia." in Hibbing, Minn., the week of Aprd 1. t than I had expected, but perhaps it Northrop Auditorium-ll:30 It. m. Mr. and Mr . Has had ju re­ may be of interest. Around the first DEnATE - Minnesota vs. University of turned from a hort vi it with Mrs. of June 1 I expect to get another 'Me- Hawaii. Burton Hall--8: 00 p. m. Lillian 1\1. B lair of Minneapolis. THE NATION ~ S LIST

TELEPHONE DIRECTORY

IlE telephone directory i the naLion"s 1\ [orc than 12,000,000 nrune ar Ii ted in T aIling Ii t. 1\IilIion of pcopI refer to the dil'e toric of the operating cOITlpanic­ it daily-in honle and office and ill pub­ of the Bell y ten1.. You can go tl'aight to

Ii pay tation. It i Lh bu ie t book-it any onc of the e nullions of peopI -ea ~ ily, pIa. a pal't ill countlc a ti,·iLics. qui kly and cconoITlically-by telephon . For the name in the tclcph HC b ok aI'

lOr Lhannanle. They aI' friend hip ~ and The classified din'Clor., is all ill/portanlJeol ure oj) our (e/c­ home and fanulic . They arc bridO'c pru'tic­ pllOlle bool..·. II is a l/OtHly, reliab/e bit) ing guide -a quid·.. , easy Icay (ofind "IT Ilerc To Buy It." and golf galll ~ -bu ~ ine ~ ucces e - buycr and ellcr of wheat or pin or kys l'apCl's. BELL TELEPIIO E SY TE1\I -

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- and Chesterfields are usually there

they're mild and yet 7tr~e6 The Minnesota Alumni Weekly

fFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 1'l1e Golden Gophers of The Uni,ersity of Minnesota

Victory Years

A 50 -Yard Line View of Minnesota Football

What do you know about the Gophers who are now in training for the 1936 season? Meet them in the booklet TH E GOLDEN GOPH ERS. It includes pictures of all the lettermen, a preview of the 1936 campaign, and other information about players and coaches that will be of interest to every alumnus interested in the game and in the activities of the Gophers. It has been hailed by sports writers and by alumni for its completeness in picturing 50 years of Minnesota football. The activities of the teams of 1933, 1934 and 1935 are featured. The book of 64 pages, 8Y2x11, contains more than 20,000 words and 90 pictures of players and scenes. It includes the records of 011 Minnesota football teams from 1886 through 1935. Every alumnus will prize a copy of this souvenir booklet. One Dollar. General Alumni Association lIS Administration Bldg. University of Minnesota The Story of Champions Minneapolis. S long as football is played the record of Minne- This is my order for one copy of the souvenir A sota teams of the past three seasons will stand os booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. Bill me for one dollar when the book is mailed. one of the most brilliant achievements in the history of the popular American intercollegiate sport. This record is compiled in print ond pictures in the souvenir Name __ booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. The order blank at the left is for your convenience in Address ordering your copy. Enclose the one dollar if you desire. City ______Otherwise you will be billed when the book is mailed. The Minnesota AlulDni Weekly The Official Publication of Minnesota Alumni

VOLUME 35 • MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, APRIL 18, 1936 • NU tBER 27

Organized Control of Business

SHOt LD like tl) begin this di,­ By container-: other, who "ould work I cl1,~ion hy some little explanation George Filipeui children and adult~ for long hour, and of the terms "e are ahout to lhl'. IInder un -anitary condition,: and till By "or!o(anizl'd enntrol" is meant the ProfessaT of Economics others who \\ ouid. a indi,-idual, or in l'ltlll~ up of devices. through all (,xist­ !!rOllp". ,ecure control of necessary ina. or specially formed social grollp. materiab and force huyer to pay ex­ til direet the o[.ll'rations of blbll](''iS are intere'ited in and their landard, of orbitantly high price, for these neces­ IInit-. Thi ... eoutro] i, co/l_,('ioll .~ alld li\·inj.{ depend upon their ability to get ,itie _ Left to themsel\'e" without in­ self-willed as eontrasted with the ollfo- for their money a, large quanti tie_ and terferencc by any a~ency of 'ociety. all 1II111ie eontrol that i. an out~()" th of "arietie of good, a, po"ible: the busi­ of the:,e thing- would be done. It i l'Hlllltion and custom. and it i, 1' .. - ness men are interested in se<'uring a, doubtful whether there i ' any things that arc anti-social Left to ea~es may be accompanied b) ~imil;r ing of lll,sine,~. it stands out rather themseln' . there are some" ho would sufferings. Here. again. arc large area dearly that the frl'e choiet" of tIll' eOI1- use shoddy materials; they would for organized eontrol and the fact i UIlll'I:S /IS tn what they -hall buy and adl1lt~'ratl' ;lnd cyen poison foodstuff . that probably there are few who would the personal rcw;lI'ds twailabll' for the There are .ome who would make false say that society 'hould keep "hands hll',inrss men !lnd the wage earnl'rs, arc claims for the euraliYe powers of medi­ ofT." The ditTerenc(" among analy t­ of the ulmost importance in detrrmin­ cille; olhus who would lise fal -e in these ~':beS is on the question of Icha.t iug "hllt shall be produced. The buyer weight, and measures and deceptive should be done rather than in whether TilE ;\lIN'iE"'OTA ALUMNI WJo;EKLY sOlllctliillfl shoulu be done, Hnu in ~ISN~ in the ::.l'lting lip of control organ­ Summary whether theubstitution of a particular IzatIOn , the directions in which con­ Thr (xll'nt and lll{' methods of con social control will be more effective trol is exercised, and the capacities of lrol of hllsinl'.s are matters that nced than a eU1Tent automatic control. Fre­ lhe persons \\ ho are eharged with the long nnc! st'\'lOlIS consideration beron quently the differences ari 'C from the power to control. llll'Y an' acc('ptl'd, for sllch control eoneluRions on the ullimat efl'('cl~ of ... ome indu. trial organization have may bring remedie' in one directIOn proposed remedies. Let us con~ider the accomplishe,1 a good deal that is l1elp­ but they may hring 10 'es and develop I1linois or Penn.ylvania coal miner for ful to individual industrIes and busi­ nt'\\ problems in other directions. Or­ a momenl. Probably many people nes. unit~, and to soeielv. In the col­ ga~ized ('ontrol by government h co~Ild offer an easy solution. They ton textile field a cOllsi:lerablc succe stncLly limited in it. efi'ectivene" lI!1yld Say, and I am sure there are was 111et ill raising the lewl of compe­ (Tllder dictator 'hips it ha the advau­ some \\ ho Il'ollid ay, let the govern­ tition to the point "here women and tage of coordination, of 'pecific direc­ ment lake some thousands of coal children were I.'liminaterl from night tion toward all end: it is restricted, miners and train them as mechanic, 'mployment. \ considerable reduc­ howenr, to the capacities of the small and t1ll'n moY!.' them and tlwir families tion in hours also was ('ll'eetcd. Other group with \\ hich the dictator sur­ to Conllceticut where they ean work as indu -trial organi7ations have al tempted rounds himself and to the limited as­ mechanics in plants that manufacturc to regularize employment, that is, to similalive ability of the mind of one aeroplane engine.. It is quite simple, reduce the efTI'd, of seasollality similar lIlan: its direction i~ determined by lilt' except for the fact that the machinisb to the recent effort. of the au'tomobile ambitions and aims of one person. Th, union would oppo.e the entrance of a manufacturer.. Whether this particu­ dictator'. dream of empire maJ' re ult conple of thousand new machinisb lar case is successful or not is beside in the impoverishment of his countrY­ trained at government expense and the point. It i~ illustrative of ~hat an men and the ultimate collapse of till' moved into the tate of Connecticut indu try may try "hen organizalion orial arc! 'r. On the other hand, lm­ The eoal operators in Illinois and Pcnn- provides a meallS for individual mem­ der a political democracy, go\'crnml'nt ylvania would aLo oppose it if the re­ bers to act in ways in which the, would control is the outgrowlh of the influ­ sult were to create enough of a labor like to act, but' cannot if they stand <'nee of a number of pre 'sure group scarcity of coal miners to r{'Cluire the alone. looking not to the gcneral welfare hut payment of higher wages, for that lo the ,vpccwl welfare of particular might result in higher cost of produc­ To tho e business l11en \\ ho ohject to groups, whether they be inriu. trial, further and more rapid e,-~an ion of tion of coal and a further 10 ' of mar­ agri(,ultural, military, political or fl'­ ket Lo substitute fuels, or it might re- social interference in their affairs it gionaL Through the compromising of ult in a greater timulus Lo more effi­ would seem that a way is open to re­ the leaders of lhes{' group" gelll'ral cient utilization of coal by those who tard the movement, bl1t it is doubt­ welfare is lost sight of and each thiuk are still using it. Here i. 'U maladjust­ ful if they will take the open "a~'. For he has driven [or himself the b"sl bar­ ment that does not rectify itself readily example, trarle associations ('ol1ld en­ gain possihle. But whl'lhl'r through if left alone, yet neither is it solved p;age in muc'h hroaclcr a<'livities than [loli tical dictatorship or so-called demo­ very readily by social control. they haw engaged in in the past. As­ era ic efforls to conlrol, out of thl"e sociation funrls eOl1ld hI" 11. I'd to de­ condition. ari e centralized pre surc up­ velo]) ne\\ production ml'lhods, to in­ Organized Control of Business on cOlt.'mmptioll H' \\ell as upou /'TO­ stall the knowll nUlnaw'ment techniques dliCtioll. J list recl'nlly a bill \\ as drawll Til d('~ire for organized control by in the individual plants, to e'l(perimenl business is due to the facl that there to require thal maple syrup han: add .. d with po. ible 11('\\ raw materials, to to it a spccified :ullom;t of corn synI)' are a great number of things lhat busi­ make inclustrial joh studies and devise ne s men do not like about ('ompcti­ as a means of helping the corn gnl\HT. III can of selection and placemcnt of This attempt to make the consunll'r tion. The pres ure upon them to lower "ol'kers. The trade association could cat corn and maple syrup \\ Ill'tl1l' I' hI' cosls in order to meet competitive carry thl"sc developmenl to the indi­ wnnt that ('ombination or not IS a lyl'(' prices; the pressure to d vclop l1e\\ vidual planLs and thus pl'cpare the in­ of sugge~tl'd control lhat may be COll­ products in order lo hold one's position dustries to prorluC'e at lowl'r costs and in th market, may lead lo loss of capi­ sideretl asinine, but it is ind'ieatlye of to sell at lo,,"cr prices. Fllnds now what may happ 11 under con 'umptiun tal as" ell a 10. s of profits. Therefore, used to mil in lain tariA' lohbies, lo seek in many ea e" business men pr!'fer lo governed by plall or authorit!l as op­ government favors, lo secure subsidies, po cd to COil urnption by free cholc(' act jointly and a a group l'ITecL what ('ould be user! instead to hring ahout a is called .. tabilization," but the social greater cffieieney in production which, In a di,cussioll of this sort onr is al­ advantage of certain kinds of stahiliza­ lo a large extent. would make tariffs most cerlain to be asked: "'Vhat 1, tion is questionable. A a result we and subsidies anrl government favors !lollr solution for the \'arious defl'cts continue to struggle with the maller of Ilnlleces. ary. This is V('TV different in the economic organization?" :-'ly whether goverrunenl shall enforce com­ from the {Isl1al approach t~ the prob­ an,wer to that is nol \"Cry startling In pelition; \\ hether we shall let competi­ lems of depression and general welfare. lh(' first place, I should deny that all tion run it course and lead into go\'­ This i organized control of production of tlll' prcsent difficulties are due to ,\ ernment controlled monopoli{'s; whether in terms of get ting costs down, not defective economic organization. LllllY we hall I t eompetilor organize into prices up: thi. i organizcd control to of 0\11' illlll'r in thc main ballroom ~)f the other cia groups, will bc noti­ lhe year cia,s will he a leatlin a candi­ of the ~Iinne,ota nion 111 the 1.'\'1'­ fil'd of Ihe plans for their reunion by date' for the numerical awarrl hecau

Traditional ~ampns Rivalry Disappears

HE traditional rivalry b tween the Banquet staged by students on the T Engineers and the Miners was miss­ Farm campus was held Wedne day ing from the 1936 Engineers' Day pro­ night in the Minnesota Union . . . gram which was held on the campus Sixty pharmacy students and four Friday. The two groups are now members of the faculty left the cam­ brothers in the . new set-up which in­ pus on a field tfip which will take cludes all the technical schools in the them through the pharmaceutical Institute of Technology. And 0 the plant of the Eli Lilly Company in perennial rumors for publicity pur­ Indianapoli tndent dances po es to the effect that the all-im­ staged by the Minne ota Union this portant Blarney stone had been ground past winter have become so popular into sand by the Miners were not resur­ that the ball room will not accom­ rected for public consumption this modate the crowd . Pro£es or year. Robert Mol's Lovett of the Univer ity of Chicago has been tentatively The Engineers, the Chemists, the secured by campus peace organizations Architects and the Miners will cooper­ to deliver the address at the anti­ ate in the future in presenting the pro­ PROFESSOR EARLE KILLEEN war demon tration on April 22. The grams of such events as the Engineers' Direct.~ "New/'1orm" faculty speaker on the program will Shows. The exhibits will be prepared probably be Dr. Harold Benjamin. as- and arranged by the student of the i tant dean of the College of Educa­ various technical groups. tion ... Dr. Malcolm S. MacLean, lhe University of Wisconsin, and three director of the General College, gave of his associates will be repre ented in Student Conce1·ts one of the principal addresses at the the Stillwater colony exhibit. meeting of the National Association The third in a series of campus A erond section of the how ha$ of Directors of Physical Education \ been provided by Valeria Ludd, concerts by the Milmeapolis Sym­ for Women in St. Louis la t week. phony orchestra under the direction daughter of a former Dean of 'Women of Eugene Ormandy attracted more Shirley Edelston '36, will campaign at the University. Already known a, than 3,000 students to Northrop audi­ thi spring for a seat in the state legis­ a dancer, Mi s Ludd took to painting tori urn Tuesday. The orchestra pre­ lature from Minneapoli di trict . . . and drawing as an additional means sented a program of Victor Herbert Sigmund Romberg's "New Moon" will of expres ion. She recreates in her music with Gertrude Lutzi and Walter be pre ented in Northrop auditorium painting the aesthetic values of the Mallory as soloists. on May 1 and 2 by the University dance. ingers under the direction of Pro­ Ray Faulkner and Josephine Lutz, The three concerts this year were fe sor Earle Killeen, and Joseph Mac­ instructors in art eJucation at J\.uJl­ held as a test to determine tudent auley, Broadway inger and actor, will ne ota. will be represented in the ex­ intere t in such programs. The at­ appear in the production as gue t hibit submitted by the Minne ola tendance has been so encouraging that star . . . William Kennedy, Minne- faculty group. Mrs. Carlyle Scott, manager of the ota Daily columnist, has been named orchestra, has announced tentative commander of the Minnesota post of plans for a series of concerts through­ the Veteran of Future Wars . . . New I r/structoT out the entire school year next season. Paul Vaananen '37B. 11as been named A. Langdon Gill, formerly of the . This project gives Minnesota general chairman of the committee Washington univer ity chool of nurs­ students an opportunity to enjoy one making plans for the annual Busilless ing, thi week was appointed in truetor of the leading musical organizations School banquet in May. in the School of NlU"sing and super­ of the country at a general admis ion visor of the Univer ity nurses in lhe charge of only twenty-five cents. Art Exl71'bit obstetrical department at General Eugene Ormandy will leave the Min­ ho pitaJ. Mi Gill received her bach­ neapolis orchestra at the end of the Art work produced by three Minne­ elor's and master's degrees from the present s ason to become director of sota graduates and two undergraduates Teacher college at New York Cit~ " the Philadelphia Symphony orchestra will be included in a triple exhibit of took a course in midwifery at Uni­ and his succe, sor has not yet been work by the Stillwater Art colony. by versity college ho pital in London, named. He wi ll return to Mion apolis Valeria Ladd and by members of the England, and a post-gra luate course as guest dil"ector for several concerts Minnesota faculty to be shown at the in public health nursing at East Har­ in the regular Friday evening serie Univer ity Gallery, starting Slinday lem Nursing and Health ["vice, New next winter. and running through April 25. York. Minnesotans whose work will be Briefly Speaking included in the Stillwater colony ex­ Senior Com mittee hibit are Elizabeth Gutlu-ie, an in­ The convocation speaker on Thurs­ John Behrenbrinker, chairman of the slructor at Kemper Hall, Keno ba, senior committee in charge of com­ day was W(Llter Millis, 'ditorial writer Wis.; Wilhelm Bodine. Education of the New York Herald-Tribune and mencement annOUllccments, naro'd tht' ellior, Luci])e Fi her, graduate student. members of his committee this week . anthor of "The Road to War: America Stanley Whitteemore, Eclucaliou jun­ 1914-1917" ... On Thursday, April Law)"el1 e Meyer was named assist­ ior, und Myrna Glover Mora, a Min­ ant chairman. Other members of tht' 23. the convocation speaker will be nesota graduate. Colonel Ralph H. Isham whose topic committ e are John Rukavina. Janet wiD be "The Romance of LaWTen e Cameron Booth, well-known Min­ Or)", Mary Riggs, Gerry Mitchell. Wil­ in Arabia" . . . The annual Razz ne,lpolis arti t, Alexander Tillot On of liam Walhtce and Helen Dae Hopper. \ PRIL 18, 1936 471

Gophers Scrimmage on Northrop Field

HE football squad moved from tbe Hou e and are leading candidate for T Field JIou e to orthrop Field thi. I' gular job. There are three letter­ \~eek and s rimmage ~ession. \\er in men in the infield, l ark KJonow ki order. Bernie Bierman abo face th of Winona at fir t base, Frank tan ton task of d veloping talenL in the pass­ of ~I inneapoli at second and Vernal ing and kicking department . In re­ "Babe" LeVoir, at third ba. e. The cent ea. on , Minnesota has had Lhe candidate for the short top dutie. is iron men, Pug Lund and George Ro'­ Don Lee, a ophomore. LeVoiI, COl'. to hantUe the triple threat re­ Klono" ki and tan ton are all good spon. ihilitie. at tbe left halfback PlJ,.;i­ hill 1". tion. The ropher outfield must be com­ •\ndv Vram who ha been per­ pletely rebuilt for the coming eaon . Two football . tars, Ray Kmg and forming at the left half po~ition thu \ I::R. 'AL "BABE" LEVOIR Edwin Wid eth have been tried in the far in the pring practice il> a highly Football fo Ba.,ebaJ/ capable kicker and pa. ser but ther' outfield b caue of their ability with the bat although both men orfginally is a question as to whether he l. rugged enough to handle the multiple reported for pitching duty. Two oth('r ------.... ~~.. ------r1utiel> throughout a whole game. The leading candidate for position' in dependable Juli Alfonse looms a' the the. field during the early practice u ed for touch ball competition until potential sixty-minute man of the se slOns have been Art ,chneU and the football ,quad reports for practice coming cason but in the past he ha ~Ionte Peiper in the afternoon'. The ba eball dia­ done no punting and yer~' little pass­ Everett Gro. sman i. the ace veteran mond. are no\\ found on the new par­ ing He is a good pa"er however and of the hurling staff while Kermit Aa.e ade ground, between Fourth treet may he able to de\'elop his kicking and tan Balik are reen'es from la:t and the railroad track . ahility s('a on. King and Wideth wilJ abo Competition in the team .port i~ Larry Buhler. ,z05-pound half hack be available Cor mound dutv when organized in league with full chedule, from Windom. i a first year triple they are not needed in the ou'tfield. being played durin" April and ~lay. The rni\'ersity O'olf cour e i: a\'ail­ threat candidate who may he given Ted Brissman of t. Paul. under­ all-around responsibilitie. during hi, able of COUTs for intramural competi­ .-tudy to ~IiJt Bruhn behind the plate tion in that port. sophomore ,eason. Buhler i a PO\\ er­ la t year is the number one catcher ful runner \\ ho ha. heen moved up to on the quad. He .aw conr,ity of ~Iinne.ota next winter. ('nce ~eason this week if till' \\l'atl1l'r The s\\ immillg team placed fifth in permitted had t h(' first taste of out­ Intramural the western t'onference mcet thi.:- year door drill on orthrop Field on ;'\lon­ amI "i th "e\ eral promi.-ing ne\\ cor;"'er, day. This season th(' Gophers wi ll he The ,pring quarter bring. 11 fllll on the . quad the rophl'r~ have l'cond. The • Torth_ 'iluad. S('veral new men have shown \\ e~t ~ \\ imming med will be held III promise ill the workou t. in the Field T he gridirons on llrlhrnp Field nrl' the ~l innesotn pool on \ pril '? l. TilE :'IIINNE 'OTA LUMNI WEEKLY

The ~II~NESOTA 0 1' who were ill pire(l 1 y religi us z al and lo~ 'a ll ," The per. on who is incapable of loyalLy in smaller Lhing: will n L bc loyal in larger matLer, Th man who ha ' nol loyalty for his city, hi home organil.a­ lions, his church, hi'> chool, hi tate, i a man with­ out a home. wilhout a city, without an alma mater, withoul a country and without a OU. len and Publ·ished by women will do m~re and con tanLly do more ut of The General Alumni Association of the loyalLY than out of tle ire for monetarv r wards. University of Minnesota PI~aclrca l!y very oUlstanding achie,' men!. ha b ell in pired by aincere loyalty." WILLIAM S. GIBSON, 'ft7, Editor and Business Manager It would be ab urd of our e to judge a ma n \ LORA.lNE SKINNER '36, A ..i6tant Edit"" nlhw,ia m for thi school by hi aLtendance at all r union ' and homecoming event.. But it general!.' Vol. 35 April 18, 1936 0.27 foil \\~ that the graduate who i int rested in the welfare and the development of hi. colle~e will makl Issued on Saturday of each week during the regular session. from September to June, and monthly during July and August. Entered as an efforl occasional!." lo return to the eampu~. \nd 6econd class matter at the post office at Minneapolis, Minnesota. Life subscription with liie membership in the General Alumni Asso· if he an be on th campus wh II former classll1ate~ ciation are $60. Yearly subscriptions are $3. Subscribe with central office amI hi nd" are al 0 gathered for some special oecaioll or local secretaries. Office on the campus is 118 Administration Building. Telephone: Main 8177. thal naLul'ally mak the visit mol' pleasant. It i~ when the reunion .• pirit" reveals it...clf ill OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS ORREN E. SAPPORO. '10L, Pr.nd.nt...... Minneapolis fanla ' tic parade and wild demonstration thal lhe ERUNG S. PLATOU, '20Md, Vice·Pr ...ident...... _...... Minneapolis criti of the cu"lom find ammunilion for their gUll . Taos. F . WALLACE. '93, '95L, Tr.a.8Urer...... _ ...... Minneap olis E. B. PIERCE, '04, E",.cuti.,., Secrrla,1"I/ ...... _...... _...... _...... St. P aul An,\' :,ort of lInu ual 1 havior on the part of collcge ~tudenl. or a group of coil ge alumni aL a campu~ galhering provides mal rial for colorful tories. \11.1 NE\VS and VIEWS Lhe publi' impre. ion of lhc reunion i" moulded 11\ olle 'olorful prank rath I' than b~ the hoUl''' gin'lI H'X attend colleg rellnions? Thcre are many o\,er to a quile ele Oroll Lype of program. pOll1ls that mi ht he made in an.\\ering lhis W F atur of real intere t to all J\linn ola ~radllall'~ que lion and most of the point are so obviou to lhe are arrang d for the Alumni Da,\' program on lhl' average graduate that they need nol be Ii ted here. campus ach y ar. In the fir L place lhere nrc JlO There are many gen ral reason wh~ ' alumni like lo loug sp eche. The variOIl. quinqu nnial or fivc-} ar return to the campus for the cia. meetings and lhe class s have their reunion Inn herms in the private other Alumni Dav activiLie. But loome extent it dining rooms in the J\Iiuue ota nion and in Pio­ i an individual n';atler for each graduate is atLract'd n er Hall. In the afl moon there are opportullilil' by ome parlicular phase of the reunion experience. lo visiL variou, part of the campu~ or to talk wilh The enthu ia m f college graduate. for lheir fonner cla. smate. anel L ach r. In the evelling till' 'choo!. whether the school be Han'arc!. ;\Iinn sola 01' annual .\llllllni Dinner is held in the 1innesota Unioll Carl ton, ha been the subject of many satiric article ane! lhi of cour e i one of the out landing occaion, in which much fun has he n poked at yarious alumni on the annual alumni 'al nelal'. aclivitie anJ particularly th clas. reunion. The wriler. either haw entirely mi cd the point of vie" " ' ilh lh annual June ol11m Ileement c\:erCht'~ of college graduates or it ha~ heen their misforlulle h Ie ti than lwo months away the variou. senior acti\'i­ attend ome particular alumni funeLion which \\'a~ ti which are a part of th ' lradiLional program at this conductecl in a circll'i manner for show 01' puhlicil,' lime of the year ha\' started. The announceml'nt" pllfpo.es. arc planned and "old lit nior cIa~s arc "Occasiollall,,'," aid Harold 1\1. Wilkie. pl'c"idclIl which by s of the Board of Regen ls of the niy r iLy of Wiscoll ­ now b iug distribuLed and in earl~' J\Ia,\' the 1IH'1ll' her" of Lhe class of 19:36 will take parl in "arioll sin, in a reccnL article on this topic,"w hear . OIl1C­ l" enls which are preliminary lo lh' final gradualioll onc ~pcak in a slighting manner of thc spirit of lhe alumni displayed toward Lh ir .1Ima Mater, including exereis " in l\Iemorial ladiuJl1 011 ,June 15 . their enthu 'ia m, at reunion and olherwi. c. Sonlc­ The ,'enemble Oak 1'noll which ha~ been the ('elltcr times the impre>i..,ion is convey d lhal the piril of of student activities at lh ni\' rsily since the fir"t 'dying for d ar old Hulg rs' j someLhing for lInill­ sludents ulTived on tit campl1~ continues to he llll' lellecLual minds; Lhal the lru intelJcrLlIal i Loo broad scene of lIch ('eremol1ie~ a · Lh .ap and Gemn ])a~ minded for stich parLisan hip; lhaL alulllni enLhn..,ia'il1l para(le and the knighLing of ~ t. Pal b,v the Enginerr i. noL dig-nified or .cholarly and cOIILl'ihuLe. nothing on Enginecrs' Day. nd wh n the sun is beating lo the inLell clual progress of th chool. do\\'n oul of a cloudl s sky in the ~umlllel' .. ti!1le il "To my mind any uch . Lal menb are unfounded i" olle of the "badiesl and ;no l J' stful poh in lll(' in realit.', and 0\' rluok the fael Lhal part isan loyal lies cil.\'. almo 'L alway, if JloL a lway, in pire and accompany ,ludelll ('ollllnillees will sOOIl b appointed 10 cOllsLructive achievem nts. Those "ho have on­ inauguraLe plan 1'01' lheir parl of the annllal Home­ trihllt d mO'il to the heLlcI'm nL of socieL \. have he 11 coming next fall. Th gamc heLwe'lI IinnesoLa alld parlisan -loyal z aloL who ha\'(~ b en i;lLensely de­ I owa on Nov mb l' 7 has been s L a . the Hom Olll­ voted lo all in tiLuLiol1. a cause. a per,,;oll. a counLr," ing cllgag menl. .\PRlL 18, 1936 473

The Reviewing Stand w. s. G.

Dean JfI ulling to R etire carrie member hip in .).) national, tate and local organization in tbe EINA FREDERICK J. W LL­ field of pharmacy, cience, art and re­ D '96L; '98G, of the College of ligion. He i al 0 a member of 12 na­ Pharmacy, one of the country's leading tional and tate a ·ociations. educators in his field for nearly hall a Among tbe bon or accorded Dean century. ,"\-ill retire from hi admini tra­ Wulling in tbe field of pharmacy was a tive po t at the end of the pre ent 2-year presidency of tbe American chool year. Dr. Wulling came to the Pharmaceutical as ociation in 1916- Uni\'er ity of Iinnesota in 1892 to 1917, election a pre ident of the organize the ollege of Pharmacy and .imerican As ociation of College of he ha. been at the head of thi Univer- Pharmacy, 1915-1916, and a lire-time ity division iDee that year. chairman hip of tbe cientific and prac­ The pharmaceutical profe ion of tical ection of the Minne ota tate DEA. · F. J . '1GLLIXG thi country and of the world hould Pharmaceutical a ociation. be forever grateful that Dr. WulIing turnrd hi energy to pharmacy rather .\ head of the College of Pharmacy, than to anyone of a number of other Dean Wulling ha ad\'ocated and fo '­ tered higher cbola tic tandard for ing hi toric Edinburgh the group w:ill fields in which he ha . hown rare tal­ be taken through the Tro-sacb by pharmacy tudent. Tbe ~Iinne<;ota ent. IIe might have been a leader in train. bu . boat. and carriage. the legal profe ion, in general educa­ college wa tbe fir t to I' ta bli h a 3- The tour will then extend into tbe tion. in hemi. try, in ~Iedicine, or in year required cour e in pharmacy and lake country of England. through the mu ic and art. fir t to offer an optional 4-year cour e hakespeare country. and then into He rec iv d hi - degree in law from which later became obligatory. London. Three day- will be spent in the niver ity of linne ota in 1 96 Dean 'lulling will deli\'er an ad­ the great Engli -h city a the visitors but he prefe;red to continue as dean dres ' before the Brooklyn ollege of ,;ew the intere ting ection and the of the ollege of Pharmacy. He al 0 Pharmacy April 21. in connection with hi toric pot . The nen top after completed work for variou medical the college' . emi-centennial celebra­ London will be Pari-. Alter viewing degree and he ha been honored for tion. The dean . erved a a profes or hi work in the field of chemi try and of pharmacy at thi chool previou to the ight in and about thi city the allied . ience. lIe ha travelled wide­ coming to :;\Iinne ota in 1 92. group will be di\·ided into .maller ec­ ly and has one of the out tandmg col­ tion for the tour- through the con­ The following day Dean Wulling "ill tinent. ll'ctions of arl in }Iinne.o'\poli . .\.0- peak at a emi-centennial program of othl'r of the avocation of thi ver atile the Tniversity of Buffalo', college of High up in the ~ wi,s Alps. the spon­ , cholar i music in which field he might pharmacy. sor' of the tour haye re en'ed a chalet have di stingui"hed him. elf a a yiolin­ which ,,-ill be used exclu. ively through isl or a ' a critic. the summer by the groups from thi Dean 'Yulling \\as born in Brooklyn. unl1uer Trat'ei ection of the country. Xl' " York. and after completing \York Another highly intere ting feature of in the public . chools he entered a bu. i­ everal hundred high chool and col­ the tours arranaed by Dean ~lc reery ness college in New York ity. In lege tudent and i'IlIIne-ota alumni i- the arran <1ement by which the mem­ 1 81 he enrolled at olulUbia Univer­ \lip yiit the lympic game- in Berlin bers of the American partie will be ity and rccciv d hi fir t degree from tIll UIDmcr and trawl through other entertained at variou point - by groups that in. titulion. In later year that ec~ions of ~urope in touring group of nati\'e tndents. Yiewpoint on ~chool wa. to honor him a • one of il wluch are hell1g arran

Medical Alumni Plan Meetings

HE Medical Alumni A ociation of an Du en '25 r, u tin G. Engel T the University of finn ota an­ '25, E. Keith Tanner '25Ex. Dr. Ed­ nounce two dinner meetings to be held ward L. Altendorf '26D, Louis . Bur­ during the next month. On May 5, the nett '28Ed. Dr. lifford J. 01 en '29D, Iedical graduate will dine together in lone Ko 10 ky '20Ed, Loui e Kiewel Roche ter during the meting of the 'SOB , Ir. 'SOB and 1\Ir . L. Frederick Minne ota State Iedical A ociation. l\lartin (Ruth E. Wil on 'S2Ed), El­ The arrangement for thi occa ion are mer oehren 'S2 g. • . Bernard Peter- being completed by Dr. Adam mith on 'SSEx, Burton E . Peter on 'SSEx. of Milmeapoli , pre ident of the Min­ Lowell D . moob ·SlEx. Dr. Albert E . ne ota Iedical Alumni group. and Dr. Ammund n ·1~Ud. and Roy B. Lar­ Edward ook. pre ident of the on . Rochester unit of the General Alumni A ocialion. Other pre ent included: R. K. Carne '94L. Royalton: Dr. T. B. Nel­ l\1inne ota medical graduates from on '12D, wam:ille; Dr. Earl H . Mc­ all parts of the country will attend the Gonagle 'lSD, R yalton, and Dr. John convention of the American Medical B. imon ·SO Id. wanville. As ociation in Kan a ity, lay 11 to 15 . On the evening of l\lay 13 the The following officer were elected: Minne ota alumni pre eot will attend a Paul . Gille pie '17, president; R. K. .\ . EDER '3.5 sp cial Minne ota dinner. Dr. L. E . Carne '94L, vice pre ident; Dr. John ~I.\RG\RET Clay don of Red Wing i chairman of B. imon 'SOMd, econd vice presi­ IRGARET JLINE SEDER '35, the l\linne ota Alumni dinner com­ dent: L. Frederick Iartin 'SOB, ecre­ M Phi Beta Kappa. i8 the recipient mittee for the American l\ledical tary; Louise Kiewel 'SOB, trea urer; of th e JIillneapolis College Women's ociatiol1 event while Dr. Hjalmar Ol­ enator Frederick J. Miller '12L. and club fe/lou'ship at the Unhcrsity of en of Kansa City i the local chair­ Dr. . J . Oben '29D, member of the Jiinnesota for the year 1936-S7 . all­ man. executive committee. nOll1lCeS .1/ rs . .1 rllwr . Pulling. ch(lir­ man of tilt fellou'ship au'ard comllLit­ Ohio Meetings tee. Federal tudents During the coming week, Alumni Miss eda, the daughte-r of Mr. all d ecretary E . B. Pierce will meet with New appointment of 25Q tudents 111rs. Arthur R . • ecier, 1375 letelallel Iinne o'ta alumni club in incinnati for federal aid at the niver ity for avenlle. t. Paul. receit'ed her B ..!. de­ and in leveland. The dinner in in­ the pring quarter was announced thi., gree summa clnn laude frO'Tlt the D1II­ cinnati will be held at the Hotel inton week by l\Ir . Dorothy Johnson. ecre­ z ersity ;11 December. 1935. and hu'c on Tue day, April 21 at even o'clock. tary of the committee on tudent work October. ) 935 . ha8 beell tcac/Zi1lg as. is­ J . 1\1. Cook '28E. i in charge of the project . arrangement for the dinner. tallt ill the department of p ycholoY lJ , The picture of the 1935 l\1inne ota Of the e appointment 50 were made u orkillY f(~r hcr .11..1. degree. football ea on will be hown as a part to tudents who up to lhi quarter of the program at Cincinnati and al 0 were on the cholar hip aUlhorized •• at I veland wher the Iinne otan by Pre ident offman, di continued will gather on Thursday evening, pril for the pring quarter. 23 at 6:30 o'clock. The Cleveland din­ Gencrnl arrangement for the oc a­ ner will be held at louffer R taurant, ix of the appointments "'ere rein- ~ion werc 'olllpleted by Dorothy ::\1cr­ 850 Euclid Avenue. The plan ' for thi tatements of tudent who had drop­ ritt. John Rukavina and Roberta meting are being made by Gate E . ped out of school during the winter Shine. Hunt '20E, and Glady Wallane '33E. quarter due to illoe s. The appoint­ Oth('r eommilll'cs and their ('hair­ ment of the 56 tudent · was made men include ' publicity, Lucille Tatt'. Among Those Present po ible by cancellation invitations. Jack Behrenbrinker; lkc­ oration" Rachel Fri void; reception, mong tho e pre ent at the organi­ 'Yinona arl n; program, enC\'Je\'c zation meeting of the l\Iorrion ounty Education Dinner alumni unit at Little Falls which wa GoldbluJll . reported in the April 11 i ue of th Vernal "Babe" Le Voir, expert ignal­ Weelely were the following: caller on Iinne ola footbaU teams • From LillIe Falls: Dr. John B. of th pa t three sea ons, made good HoI t '95l\Id, Judge Don M . ameron use of hi voice in a ncw role thi~ Control of Business '98L, Dr. C. F. HoI t '01 rd, Dr. E. W. week when he erved as toa lma tel' [From page 4U '] Kaliher '02D, Frank Kiewel 'OsEx, at the annual all-Edu alion dinner Con, tilution, a a sination of ilJterna­ Arthur E . Lovdahl '0 P, Mr. '12 g and in the Minnesola nion. tional banker. redi tribution of the Mr . Henry Werner (Margaret mith 011 tbe program of the yearly event wealth h ld by the upper two per cent 'lOEd) , • nator Fred rick J . l\Iiller '12L. Loid . Ryan '13E, Ir. A. E. were a serie of numb r arranged of the population. 0 ialism. ommu­ Lovdahl (Alma John on '15N), Dr. by faculty members and tudcnl in­ niSIn . Fa, ci m, and something that I , he ter H. Longley '15D, Ir. '17 and cluding a min trel how taged by call d erroneously one 11undr d per ceot fr .. Paul . Gille pie (Hclen Dale students in the field of music edu a­ Am ricanism. Anyone of the c ha, '19), Au tin L. Grime ''i?5L, Earl tion. been guarant cd to restore prosperity. APRIL 18, 1936 475

However, whal we are trying to recon­ ocial Agencie The election wa held 1922 cile ar economic security, progress to­ at a meeting of the board of director ::\'lel\'ina F. Palmer '22~ is with the wa.r~ a higher ~lflndard of living for all, Thursday night, April !? F. tuart city health department at ~ewton, religlOu, political and intellectual hapin, profe or and head of the de­ :.\Ia . liberty and freedom of the individual. partment of ociology at the niversity 1923 will .erve a new vice pre ident and Organized control of bu ine. mu t take Alexander Gow '23::'11 is W. P. A. di - all of the e thing into account. For member of the board. He i to be an advisor in the department of ocia) trict engineer at t. Louis, Mo. the mo. t part we are till triving to Isabel ::'II. Filmore '23 was the name keep the e thing in balance' we till planning and research. "The experience and background of of ~Ir . George Blum whose addre is desire a ':l tern lhat \\ill let' the mil­ Wi ota Beach, hippewa Fall, Wi , lion of buyer . through the operation Profe. , or hapin, who. e department at of free choice and the price y tern the rniver ity of ~Ijnne ota rank 1924 determine whether they want- pur~ among the si~ leading univer.itie of maple yrup or whether thev want it the t :nited vtate , will be an invalu­ ~1ary E. Obermiller '2·L r has an ad­ mixed with corn yrup. rather than able a .. et to the ;'I1inneapoli Council dre at 536 Web ter Ave., Chicago, have orne person or lau say that they of ocial Agencie ," ~1r. Roger said, in Ill. must u e the mixture. O~ the oth~r commenting on the new board mem­ Glady Kuehne '2-lEd of Saratoga hand we will not permit the manufac­ ber . Profe sor hapin organized and pring, X . Y., left for _-ew York City turer to say the product i pure if it i directed the roith ollege of ocial after a visit with her parents in ~1in­ adulterated. Ultimately, we hall be " 'ork and wa for four year a mem­ neapoli . After pending a few day in called upon to decide whether it is ber of the research committee in charge Xew York, he will return to aratoga de irable to devi e way and mean of of the department of ocial re earch on pring where he i' an in tructor at kidmore ollege. n,taking th~ ~rice ':l tern more respon­ New York City', welfare council. He wa a founder and charter member of . lve than It I , to make economic ad­ 1925 the ~alional cience Re earch council. ju. tJ?ent more rapidly than i now Mr. and )1r. Yincent A. Ryan po Ible. or whether \\e \\ill discard 1907 (E ther Okone ki '25 ) are now living thi. sy tern for another. Organized in Wahpeton, X. D. where Th. Ryan control, in other word" may . eek to Arthur E . Larkin '07Ex celebrated i now manager of the J. C. PeniJev impr~ye the pre~ent y terti through Ea ter with a family dinner party at o. to;e. Their little daug~ter, l. T~l organized effort to make the -y -tern the ::'IIillikahda club. Gue t were Mr. Ann, will be two year ~ old thi month. more workable. or it may be di~ected '''2~ and :.\Ir '. arly Ie Fraser and their Dr. '!?5D and ~Ir . Peter O'Loughlin towan] changing the pre ~nt y tern in daughter ::'Ilargaret, and ::'Ilr . George (Zita Co-tigan '25Ed) and their two a yery material way. The e - changes D. ;'lI e lintock and son>,. George, children are living at haska, ::'IIinn. m~y bring tability, but tiley may also Jame and John. ophie Barnett ~aynard '25 T, has bnng lossc., both in the field of eco­ changed her addre to Fiatt, ru. nomic life and in fi Id . other than eco­ 1909 The former Ruth Thompson '25Ex nomic, but quite a highly cheri. hed. Edith Rockwood '09, who, since i now ::'IIrs. Joseph Jaunty of ::'IIinne­ 1930 has repre ented the • Tational apoli__ ::'IIr ' . Jauntv is mother of three League of Women Voter in Washing­ children. • • • ton, D . ., and who wa former a. - Anna Bluedorn '!?5"x i' on !reneral i tant director of the bureau of rou­ duty at the ook County Children's Brief Notes About ni.cipal re earch of the Minneapoli ho pi tal. hicago. IV1C & Commerce a . ociation. ha ju t ::'IIr. and )Ir . Carl Bratnober Minnesota Alumni been appointed an a ociate in child (Anne Thomp. on Hall '25) are the weHare in the children' bureau in 12,000 Mlnne"otans read this de­ parents of a baby daughter born April p a rtment ach w eek for news ot Wahington. 6 in t. Paul. ::'Ilinn. frIends of College days. 1920 ~ora Rolf '~5. i supervi or of the Rulh E. Prince '·2oEx. prominent "Xorthwe tern branch of Red ro' 1885 l. Paul teacher. eliI'd Tue-day. April itinerant nursincr with headquarter at ~ t. Louis, ::'110, :Mary Heywood Folwell . 5Ex 7 in her home in HicrllWood Pa'rk after 01 ned the family home ~lt lO ~W 5th a . hort illne.. Private ervice' were 1926 treet outhea' t, i\Iinneapoli:, for the held. Miss Prentice. a graduate of t. Paul entral high . hool. and Winona Le lie Henry '26.-\. .. i.- C . ~ . F ..•eruor . ummer on .\pril 9. ranger at La arita. 010. ~tale Teacher' college. and tudent at the Vnin'f·· ty of :lI1inne. ota and Co­ ::'Ilarion I. opp- '~6X i. at the Palo 1893 Alto hospital. Palo Alto. alif. Dr. '93 and Mrs ..-\.. D . Hin'hfelder lumbia "Cruver. ity. at 0111' time held lhe chair of p y~hology at the , tate Pilot and ~1r .. Willingham (Olette returned recently to ::'IIinneapoli from Hasle '26~) are the parent' of a babv teacher. ' ollege at "alley ity .• T . D . • T 1'\\ Haven,onn .. where they visited boy born _'ovember 11. 1985. - their on-in-Ia\\ and daughter:Dr. and Later he wa head of the normal de­ partment of Bemidji late Teacher' EIl'.anor O. ?"erlien "~6Ed is principal ;'IIrs. Gostn Akerlof (Ro'alie Hirsch­ at hmax, ~Imn . fe lder '28). and from Princeton, ,J, college. .\1 the time of her death she where their son, Jo'eph '3lEx i ' an as- wa ' engaged in re earch work for the 1927 istant at Princeton University. slale historical society. he is uT\·ived Dr. eor I' R. Duncan '2nld. a by her mother, a brother and two c(llI,in member of the medical . laff of len 1896 Lake anatoriurn, ,, hose research on Dr. '96l\Id und Ir . John E . r we 1921 the fever treatment of tubereulosi won of R he 'ler, Minn .. returned recently Dr. '~L\g, '~5 rand ::'Ilr .. .\ rnold him I1!\ti nal recognition, died ::'IIonday, from 1\ We ' t Lldi crui e. John'on (Theodora Hilbtrom ''l5E ) .April 6. He \\ a~ "':? ' and their two cllildren Joanne and He "a' horn in SI. Paul. .. ptcmber 1901 D ris IIarn:'y re.ide ill Baltimore, Id" Ii, 1903 amI atlended schooL in that \ . R. Rogers 'O IL i. re-de led pre~- where lIr. IIllrvey ha. a position with city. 'rying his intern ship {rom the ident of the ::'IIillneapok ouncil of the rational Dair~ ' Produtl .. I edieal School al the San Fram:i, co 476 THE MlNNE OTA A LUMNI W gEKLT

city and county hospital, he then caml' 1931 to Glen Lake. While at Glen Lake he carried on Faculty Profiles Dr. '31 i\Irperimental work 1'0 m'. recently died, ha re igned her po ition in poultry, leaves the niver ... ity on Mr. ':JQ Land Mr:. Donald L. with thc ell' Haven Visiting ul'ses' J lily 1 lo b come d an of Bethel Junior Pratl (Dorolhy Sommer' '30 Ed) association, and i now at llome at 75'2 college. The appoinlment wa an­ have named lheir daughl r, born • 0- ' Vilson avenue, Dubuque, Ia. nounced by th R v. Anton E. jolund, v mber 7, 1935, Judith Oml11l'r, chairman of lh board of directors of They ar li\'ing at :N ~5 . Girard 1929 B the! institute, avenue, finn apoli , J. rthur Farl y '30, '3NGr, who For Albel'l E. Baak '3'1 E-frel' Mr. and irs. arl L. Englehorn l ach . at t. John's 'ollege, ollege­ candy and cigar passing after the an­ (Evelyn E. Dickinson ' ~9) announce vi lle, Minn., and Mrs. Farl y (Mary nOllncement of his ngagement to lhe birth of their second on, Jolm, i\Io 'her '32) lives at 16 31 tv. N ., Glady Bcll. The wedding will take on February 29. The Leap Year bahy 't. loud, Minn. They have two chil­ place in JlIne, mad lhe front page of the Great Fall~, dr n, Patricia and 1argaret. Helen Clifl'ord '3'2 Ed, who ha~ b,'ell Monl., paper, write etta Wilson '28. vacationing for :everal monlhs in 'ali­ fl'. '29Ag and Mr" Lawrence Ritler Viola Roun eville '30Ed and Dr. fornia, wi ll return in a w we k' wilh (Mary oleman McDonough of L. Gilbert trublc had a mid-winter mar­ r her mol her wbo recenl1y joinl'd lwl' Palll, Minn.) who were married in riag January IS at l. Loui , Mo. S ptember, 1934, are living at lOS Anne Poore 'SuEd, I ho is doing R d r. Ifred 1\1. Ic ausland '32 1\1<1 levcland Ave., Sl. Paul. II'. Ritter 1'0 'S itinerant nul' ing in Chippewa ann unce his a 0 iation with Dr is wilh lhe late ontrol of Blister eounly, l\1inn., has headquurters al Lyle G. Me ei le ill the practice of Ru t. ~ I ontevideo. obstetric and gyne ology at suite 10'.!'! APRIL 18, 1936 477

Pacific Mulual building, La Angele .. :\Ir. '34 Ex and .Mr. Gro\·er W. aliI. For ter (Florence 1. Parker) will THE TIDE SETS fary Eleanor ray '32 Ex of ~Iin­ make their home in Baltimore, ~Id. .. napoli. left recently for a len day art r a wedding trip in the outh. visil in ew York. Their marriage took place .\pril 4. :\Ir. Parker attend d Goucher col­ 1933 lege. 1Ir. Parker i a member of Phi ""est Kappa igrna fraternity. Elaine For. ylh '3:JEd, expound E . Donald is on 'S4Gr will re- AG AIN THIS WINTER hi tori cal development. to her hi tory lum from Lynn, }Ia ., where he i cIa ~ at Faribaull, Minn. leaching. thi ' summer to complete re­ For there'll be the same spotless com' Edilh ~Ioody '33 Ed who laught quir ment for a Ph. D. degree III fort on air-conditioned trains that English and music at Frazee, ~Iinn .. p,ycholo~y from the niver ity of turned pleased thousands west with tcache in three fields-art, mu ic and :\Iinnesota. us last summer; the low fares and hi tory-this year at ~lora. linn. :\Ir. '34 Em and ~Ir . Dwight A. sleeping car costs that appealed to Born to Dr. '33~ld and Irs. Je.' e We t (:\lary orrell Wei,er) who were careful purses. A. tocker of ~It. Vernon. )10., a baby married at ~liami . Fla.. }Iarch ~O. • This new pleasure en route adds enor­ boy. have been "at home" in }Iinneapoli, mously to enjoyment of California's sunny ince April 1. They were married in beaches, valleys and desert oases; Arizona's 1934 Holy ro Epi copal church in resorts and ranches. Virginia Browne '34 .\.g ha~ been ~Iiami . with the wedding breakfa t • Via the Santa Fe, also, are winter's most working in th ocial ervice division . crved at the ~liami Biltmore hotel. delightful stopovers-Grand Canyon, with of the Los .\ngeles aunty relief ad­ The bride a graduate of arleton new BTightAngel Lodge; the Indian-detours mini tralion since completing her ollege. and quaint Old Santa Fe, in New Mexico. di tetic interne. hip in the California • More of those popular all-expense cour for tudent Dietitian on ~Iarch 1935 Western Tours, too; fine service to Palm 1. lIer mailing addre ' i 175 W. Dr. Leonard J. Luker 'S5Gr. who re­ Spnngs; special PhoenL". Pull- ., 19th tre t, Lo Angell" . ceived hi doctorate in December, i on mans on The Chief; daily air- Ruth Lind ·kog Lindgren '34 Ag. the faculty of the L'niver ity of Toledo conditioned Santa Fe trams to . anoth rhome ec'er. i living at ·1619 at Toledo, 0., a- teacher of econdary all the Southwest. • ~ierra, Riverside, aliCornia. education. Ma:y We Hdp Plan Your Trip? Reynold L. al 'en '34 E, witb the ~Ir. 'S7 Ex and ~Ir . ~Iorden )Ic­ r ------~ niled Air Lines, engineering depart­ ab (Laura Yan Xe t 'S6 Ex), form­ F. R. COl'NELL. P... ·r Agent. Santa Fe R». : m nl, at hicugo. Ill., ask if Weekly erly of Minneapoli '. are now living I 211 Merropoht.. n Life Bldg. I rcad r know lhal Thurman Erick en I MlOneapohs. Mmn. I in Winnipeg, anada. I Send picture books and folders ..bout fares I 's ~ E ha. been tra nsferr d to lhe Rio Fritz Rarig 'S6 Ex. now attending I from ______to. ______I de Janeiro branch of Pan American ornell college. Ithaca, • '. Y.. ha' I Name ______I airline . III" i now at Brown ville. bcen awarded the Cornell "94" .Mem­ ! Addr.... ______! Te,\. orial debate prize. He won the prize. ~Iarried-Bertram Purye 'S4 "\g ~91 in ca h. in competition with five and Irene ~I. Lewi ' at niveritv other peaker. by di cu, ion of the Bapli t church. March 28. They will propo. al to give congre power to make their home at )Iankato, ~Iinn. regulate busine and agriculture. on he had been employed by the board of Profe,;;or Frank M. Rarig of the of education. Minneapoli . . peech department, he wa pre'ident Engaged-Richard . kinner '31 of the tudent' forum la t year and DID YOU B. on of Howard . kinner of ~linn - chairman of the 'ludent peace demon­ apoli. . Theta Delta hi, now living stration here. KNOW? in hicago, and H nrietta Arthur, a Katherine one Landon '35 seL student at the ationa! College of April 23 a the date f r her marriaO'c • That lhe A.lumni Weekly Educalion in Evan ton and a gradu­ to Jack Greenwood Raney of Los ~oe each week lo more than ale of 1 orthrop ollegiate chool, Angele ,Calif. Pasadena, Calif.. will Iinneapoli . ~Iinne:;ota be the cene of the ceremony. ~li ' 9,000 graduate. ? Phi Beta Betty Keller 'S·j. di prove Landon previouJy attended • 'orthrop lhe theory about Phi Beta Kappa oUegiate chool. • That only one other as her engagement i announced to alumni orcranization of a Robert Blackmar ·S.I, B, with the wed­ Iary Elizabeth Pier on '35 Ex. tate uniyer ity publi,h s a ding date Sf't for lay 9 at t. Luke's who had been visiting her brother. EdO'ar H. Pier, on. Jr .. with the Uuited weekly macrazine? ther­ Episcopal church where Iarian Pick­ publi 'h twice a month or ett '3.10 Uc, a orority sister of 1i States Fore t en'ice at apitan. . ~I., Kellcr, was married November so to ha' returned to her home at Lake monthl~-. Thomas A. Bond. The wedding will Iinnetonka, :Minn. Her marriag to take place in the evening. l\liss Kcn r Richard Barnes Thorup. on '34 E will • That the Alumni n cekly is a member of Phi B ta Kappa frater­ be a May event. ha been publi, hed continu­ nity and Kappa Kappa Gamma or­ Elizabeth . Brown '35 Gr i teach­ ou ly jnce 1901? orily. 1r. Blackmar i a member of ing in the department of zoology at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. l\li ' Keller ni ersily of hicago. • and t hat the edit 1', has had a po ition at the Dayton Ri hard F. Pribil '35 E write from crreatly appre iate your con­ company. nnta 1 Ionica. ali e., where he i tribution of n w item, and Norman Lind lrom '3 · ~ B will be employed by the Dougla Aircraft comment about yourself or be t man al th wedding of hi cia s­ corporation, that hi company' bu.i­ other alumni? ' mate, harl Edward wan,on, Jr. ne i e.q>anding rapidly. '33 Band Grac DOrt'mu on JtuH' ~o. James P. hane 'S5 Me of Black 478 TBBI MINNESOTA ALUMNI WU'D.T

Hawk, Colo., ha an extensive Ii t Harold O. Peterson '35 Md is serv­ bia Haa ' '~5 P of apolcon, . D., of addres es since graduation. tay­ ing an appointment at the Massachu­ employed in a drugstore there, was ing in the Twin Cities following com­ setts General hospital in Boston. married hristmas Day to E leanora mencement, he was with the U. S. Gertrude Braufman tein '35 MdT Herringer of Venturia, N . D . Coast and Geodetic urvey, Twin is employed and is residing at Wa h­ Caron E. arlberg '35 E, who has City area; then with Hoge Well Co., ington, D. C. a po ition with the Ander en Frame St. Paul. Moving to Colorado, he was Ella M. Johnson '35 Ed has been company of Bayport, Minn., is in employed in the home-town, Black added to the hicago chool faculty. Wa hinglon, D . C., at pre ent, and Hawk, by Sleepy Hollow Mine; at Dr. Karl E. Voldeng '35 Gr i plan Lo remain there for two m re Rus ell Gulch, Colo., he worked for practicing in Wellington, Kan., with months. the Viola Manufacturing company. his addre at Hatcher ho pita!. Mr. '35 E and Mr . Kenneth M. And is now with the Maryland-Col­ Evangeline . Malchow '35 Gr i perry now make their home in Mil­ orado Gold company, Central City, now teaching at La Cro e, Wi . waukee, Wis., where Mr. Sperry i Colorado. Marie A. Sorknes '35 Gr upel'vi es employed by the Milwaukee Light & An early spring vi it will be made the training school of the Moorhead Ga ompany. by Mi . E. Courtney Smith (Eleanor tate Teacher college. Clara E . Putney '35 Ed resign her Belden '37 Ex) who comes tIlls month Joan Bowman '35, journali m, turns po ilion at Alexandria, 1YIinn., to ac­ from St. Louis, Mo. with her husband to politics as she has joined the taff cept a teaching po ition in the May­ for the marriage of l\1arian Kay I ves of Borah-for-President organization in wood Junior High chool aL Hammond, and Charles M. awyer on April 25. the Twin Cities. Ind., at the beginning of the second R. H. Hamilton, Jr. '35 Md, form­ Harry F. Baker '35 CE is working seme ter. erly instructor of the University de­ for contractor Jame Leck in Superior, Robert Hatch '35 ha returned for partment of pathology, is now at Wi . graduale work in the department of Temple Medical school, Philadelphia, Jacob Essen '35 E is junior soil journali m. Pa. engineer for the l\Iinnesota Highway Delores Fahey '35 Ex is with the Barbara Bailey '35 Gr has accepted department at Mankato, where lhey've driv 1'S' license divi ion of the linne­ a position with the Presbyterian hos­ been having lots of snow. ola lale highway department. pital in New York City. Sarah Elizabeth Gold '35 Ag, who Carl Butzin '35Em, i working in a I obel C. Gregory '35 Gr is now graduated in 1933 from National Park furniture and undertaking estitbli h­ teaching at Mankato, lVIinn . eminary in Washington, left April ment wilh his father at Ripon, Wi. Glenn H . Leemhuis '35Md is finish­ 1 for a trip to rizona and California. Rulh Hall '37 Ex i in the banking ing up interneship at Receiving hos­ visiting friends in Phoenix, Ariz., and bu incs at Big Lake, linn. pital, Detroit, Mich. Hollywood. Robert Clark '35 Ag i engaged in J . Richard Fuchlow '35 l\Id is now Helen Lord '35 N, winter quarter conservation service with headquarl'r on active duty as a member of the graduate, wa awarded the fir t Loui'e al Wilton, Minn. medical re erves, U. . A., at Station M. Powell prize of tIllS year for at­ Francis Moore '35 g i forester at Hospital, Ft. Riley, Kan. taining the highest degree of efficiency Bagley, Minn. Clyde M. Cabot, M. D., '35 Gr in practical work. The award is of­ El a Hoidale '3, Kappa .\.lpha gives as his address Calgary As ociate fered bi-annually by the Alumnae as- Theta, daughter of Ir. and 1r. clinic, Calgary, Alberta, Can. ociation of the chool of nur. ing. Ein::tr IToidale, and EvereLt F. John-

MINNE OTA LEADER Europe-1936 COLLEGE GROUPS Mr. and Mrs. O. C. McCreery Edinburgh - Glasgow - Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Schmoker English L a ke Country - Shakespeare Country - Lon­ Mrs. B e rnie Bierman don - Paris - Switzerland Mr. Cla ir Plank - Italy - Aus tria - Po­ Mr. Lee Watson land - Hungary - Nor­ way - Sweden - Denmark - Germany - Russia. HIGH SCHOOL GROUPS Friendly associations wilh Dr. Alder- Blake foreign .vtu,/ellt .. Mr. Fleenor-Washburn Mr. and Mrs. P. Bremicker Olympic Games Mrs. Bassford-Washburn

Lectltres by faculty members of various foreign llnivcrsitic'o\'.

BIG TEN TOURS Ol'ganlzed and Directed by OTIS C. McCREERY--J. BENJ. SCHMOKER PAUL B. BRE~CKER COOPERA TING UNIVERSITIES OHIO STATE CHICAGO ILLINOIS IOWA NORTHWESTERN MICHIGAN INDIANA WISCONSIN PURDUE 479 ·\PHIL 18, 19S6

on '36 D, Phi DelLa Theta, do not " ay when" in r gard to the wedding dale-their engagement was announc­ I!ll recently. l\1r. John. on is alo a member of P. i Omega, dental frater­ nity. Dr. 1. N. Nerion 'S5 D and Ether ' tolee, t. Olaf college alumna, were married at Luther Theological em­ For forey-two years the choice Illarv wh re Dr. tolee i head of the dep;rtmenL of ml lon, April 15 of University students, faculty Dr. Xeri.on from Wanamingo, :\Iinn. members, campus organizations Deanne LouIS Hatfield ·S.5 Ed ha and alumni in its neighborhood. et June S for her marriage to Wilbur Hughe ndre 'S4, \\ ith ceremony to be read in t. :\Iary' Epi opal church, with the bride' brother. Rev. 'ictor R. Hatfield, a si ting the rector. • :'Ilr. Victor Hatfield is named as matron of honor. Junior-Prom leader .Ie ~ie Aslakson 'S7, and :\Iargar t St. Anthony Falls Office Emery will he hriue. maids. .\s best man i chosen ordon .\ ndre 'S5 Ex. First National Bank \rthur • anford 'S5:'1IE deh'e fur­ ther into metallurgical problem~, do­ and Trust Company ing re earch work at Battelle .Iemor­ East Htm,upin at Fourth Street ial In -titute Hligo W . :'IIorten 'on '35 r isuper- intt'ndent o[ chools at Bricelyn, :\11nn. William Coouno\\ 'S7 Ex. who has .1ffi1iated II itl! FIrSt Bank lork Corporation been 'eeing lhe world as a 'ailor on Jiember Federal DepoS1t 11l~uranu CorporatlOlI the T;nited tate' :'IIerchant i\Iarine sle~\Il1er which . ailed on two exlended trips Lo Europe, ha returned to Excel~ior, l\linn to re'lIIlle life a a stlldent. onstance Fegle', Pi Phi, '36 anu Cu~ler .•\dams 'Sl ~[, Theta Dclln CI11, \\ ill "middle ai Ie" it June 17 01, chey 'S.l Gr i high chool teacher at Gilbert, linn . .John J. :McGlone 'S5 E ha a po~i­ tion wilh the Bridge Operator Engi­ neering and In p ction bureau. i\Iinne­ C. P. Nitric Acid apoli . Terence mith 'S5 l\IE i' winter­ C. P. Sulphuric Acid ing in Ontario, anada. where he fol­ C. P. Glacial Acetic low' hi, profe ion with the Hollinger Mine. C. P. Hydrochloric Acid Beatrice Friedlander 'S5 i' to C. P. Ammonium Hydroxide be includ u in the" hicago Week by Week" ro. ter. While on a vi it with Always Dependable fril'nds therc, :'IIi. ' Frieulallder, whose Prompt Delivery home i in Iinnellpoli. accepted a po~ilion and "ill re ide there. THE GRASSELLI CHEMICAL CO. Dr. Harold P . Lundgren 'S5 Gr i~ Founded 1839 one of two aidin lT Profe. SOl' S\'cdbcrg at the niversi ly of Upsala in e.­ @~~~~ Cleveland, O. ]1l'rime nts on a eel·tain thyroid di:;­ ordn lending to prove lhat the eause lie~ in [Itt' thyroid hormones and not III It ba 'leri\ll;l. On th lhyroid dis­ ('overie. i, u' cd th(' "ultra-centrifuge." I1n ill\' ntion of Pro re ~or S\'edberg\ re 'ully wi nni ng the :\lobel prizt' liliaI'd. Collaborat ing on the tudie' were Pro[e or "edberg, Dr. K ai Peder~e l\ of Denmark, and Dr. Lundgren. Financial Condition of The Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company December 31, 1935 Fifty-Sixth A nnual Statem ent Assets Liabilities Cash -- - - - $ 1,670,413.22 Reserves on Policies - - $29,039,491.70 Bonds: Claim awaiting proof - 190,905.86 United States Government $1,994,239.30 State, Canadian, Reserved for unreported Municipal - 6,023,129.61 claims -- - -- 50,000.00 Railroad -- 2,581,310.93 Public Reserved for Taxes (payable Utilities 5,539,865.67 in 1936) ------185,200.00 Industrial and Miscel­ Dividends for Policyholders - 1,345,092.21 laneous 268,912.12 16,407,457.63 Stocks 1,666,835.64 Mortgage Loans: Interest paid in advance -- 141,070.26 City - -$2,297,646.07 Farm 952,005.82 3,249,651.89 Premiums paid in advance Loans to Policyholders - - 6,313,107.86 including Premium Dep6sit Real Estate (Incl. Home Office Bldg.) - - - - 2,548,020.37 Funds --- - 722,237.57 Real Estate Sold Under Contract - - - - 503,441.42 Other Liabilities 27,181.12 Premiums (Net): Outstand~ ing or deferred, secured by Contingency Fund 500,000. Policy Reserves -- - - 1,199,470.06 Interest due and accrued and Surplus 1,675,010.71 . other admitted assets 317,791.34 c::c Total ------$33,876,189.43 Total - $33,876,189.43 E-< o U) w Company Growth z Insurance Surplus and ~ Z H Dec. 31 in Force Resources Contingency Funds :E 1919 $ 59,904,344 $ 6,988,179.88 $ 400,681.39 1924 107,153,798 12,594,366.70 1,143,323.10 o "" 1929 183,312,161 22,529,713.09 1,661,115.37 >-0 E-< 1934 191,973,147 31,167,556.84 2,056,849.01 H U) 1935 197,860,562 33,876,189.43 2, 175,010.71 p:: W New Business (paid for) in 1935-$33,409,OOO-increase 11 % > H (Average all Companies estimated at 30/0) :z; :::J

HIGHLIGHTS OF 1935 Insurance in F orce increased - - $6,000,000 Assets increased ------$2,700,000 ~ ~} (~ ~) Surplus increased to - - - - - $2, 176,000 -= r- t- .:s; P ayments to Policyholders and t- .:s; ~s, ~ . Beneficiaries ------$3,460,000 ~&~s. ~ . ~.~rdnCe G ~/'dnCe G - For Further Details Write for a Copy of Our -... I· 1935 Detailed Statement • The Minnesota Alumni Weekly

fFIC"'IAI PIIRllrATI()N ()F THF IINIVF~c;.ITV ()F MINNFS()TA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION -it's more than that • 42 YEARS ....

Printers to a Collegiate Clientele

These years of experience have developed a most complete understanding of the require- ments of scholastic printing-ranging from the modest individual card or stationery to the most impressive annuals and periodicals. • THE COLWELL PRESS, INC. 405 SOUTH SIXTH STREET GENEVA 9288-9289-9280 MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA The Minnesota AluDlni Weekly The Official Publication of ~linnesota Alumni

VOLUME 35 • MI 25. 1936 • NUMBER 28

Present Status of Unemployment Insurance

r\' preceding week. writer repre­ By D\LE YODER a cure-all for the problem of unem­ I senting the faculty of the chool Profe$sar of Economics ployment, but it i also important of Busines Admini lration of the -ni­ to realize that there are numerous versity have pre ented everal of the w other devices that are being proposed, mor important a pect of recent considered, and experimented with, change in legi, lation affecting the lodge and the theater to mO\'ie , or both in thi country and abroad. that economic activitie and intere t of to and from miniature golf-change may play an equally important part citizen ' of the nited tate'. Profc or in tyle and type of clothing. the in the olution of the problem of em­ chmidt di cu I'd one of the mo t tran ilion from cotton to ,ilk, or from ployment insecurity. There i , for iml rtant pha-e of the current ocial silk to wool.-change' in methods of in lance, the whole field of po ible curity program. that involving al­ tran portation, the pa ing of the manaaerial devices that may be ap­ le\'iation of the in ecurity of old age. public livery table and the coming plicable to the problem, involving the a, a part of thi erie, and continu­ of the public garage with it family po sibility of more regular, uniform ing the general direction th 'c articles car. It will be apparent that worker use of labor in productive processes. ha\'e taken. it i propo ed to examine cannot readily adapt their kill in There are the twin field of per' onal briefly another a. pect of o-called tt:nding hor to servicing automo­ rehabilitation and vocational guidance social, curitv le!!'i lation. that involved bile. that many in the older in­ and education, at present in their in­ in 1I1 r duc'lion of in ecurity in em­ du trie mu t ea'rch long to find new fancy, e pecially in the nited tate-, ployment. with pecial refe'rencc to employment for which they are fitted. that may reasonably be expected to the u e of what i generally referred In summary. therefore. it must be develop to a point where they can and to a3 "unemployment in urance." recogrUzed that th cau' e' of un­ will make a genuine contribution to There i no intention to uage t employment in modern -ociety are not the tabilization of employment. There that all type of in ecurity in em­ few and imple but numerou- and i the po ible u e of public works ploment are likely to he relieved hy complex. program introduced at time- when unemployment in urance or that it i unemployment becorne acute. \\;th thl only or even the mo t important T TNE:\lPLOY~lE~T in,urance. a ' it which we ha\'e been experimenting in of th po , ible • teps that may b taken U i U uallv conceived and contem­ thi country for the pa t everal years in attacking the general problem of plated. cannot be expected to provide a and with which e"eral European nat­ unrmployment. A · a matter of fact. mean of eliminating, reducing. or al­ tion' are also invol\'ed in extensive th re are many t 'pe of unemploy­ leviating all the e type' of unemploy­ experiment . All these and eyeral ment. in the en e that unemployment ment. It is not intended to care for other de\;ce , including especiall~· the ari es Crom a variety of ource or tho e whoe unemployment i- occa­ extensive u e of what i- known a the cauc , and it will he clear that unem­ !>loned by their own unemployability. dismi_'al waae. may have effect upon ployment in urance can, at be t. be ef­ ~Io t unemployables would n t. pre um­ lhe problem of employment in lability r ctive in dealing with only 11 part of ably, be able to e tablish sufficiently and in ecurity a far-reaching as that these ource, of in ecurity. long record of continuous employment exerted by the more popular. spectac­ Thl!' it may be aid that principal to make them elicible for benefits under ular device generally de cribed as un­ typ of unemployment, 0 far a the propo ed insurance y tem. It employment insurance. their cau ar concerned. include will not and should not be expected to The e e ential limitation upon the that arising from (1) per onal cau e .. eliminate the unemployment occa.ion­ usefulne- and effectivene_ of un­ i.e. phy ical, mental, or emotional ed by the -evere 'ea onal fluctuations employment insurance help to explain lIlability to hold a job or po ition in indu_lrie" that are ubject to ucb the slowne with which it has de­ ( ~) ~ea. onal fhmeLuation in pro­ condition . ,\ a matter of fact. many veloped and it- pre ent rather un­ duction and employment in man' in­ of the propo, al for unemployrneu't certain • tatu' in the United .. tate-. dustries. (3) cyclical fluctuation .. insurance specifically exempt the hi"h­ The antecedent of modern unemploy­ more or les Lypical of bu ine Iy - a ' onal indu trie from coverage. ment re en'e are the trade union a a whole. and (1) certain other nemployment insurance would e. ert benefit plan that provide for pay­ change' in habit, cu tom '. con­ its influence principally upon other ment to members who are out of ventions. und mclhod - of produ tion type.' of mployment ins curity, partic­ work, and uch benefit \I ere e tabli h­ that arc popularly lumped together ularl~r that occa iOlled b~' evere ed in everal of the older labor orl!3l1- in the term ··te hnolorriclIl hange~." cyclical fluctuation and that involved ization. both in thi and other na­ hut \I hieh actuall~ ' involve much more in cultural and technological changes. tion ~hortly after the be!!inning of thun the mere variati n of production and it i chiefly in connection with the meteenth century. ~lo t public tt'chnique. This Jat our e of un­ the_c type, of unemployment that the unemployment in urance i "enerally l'lllpl ymenl, one of the most im­ po' ibl' valu of lwemployment in­ de cribcd as ha\;ug begun with th'c Il(lrlant, is too frequently i!!I1or '(\. It 'urallce must be ·ol1 rrht. ub idization of the e union benefits Is illu lruted by changrs in ustomary Kot only 'hould it he understood by the city of ,hent in 1 9 . There­ a ll1u~eml'nl, 'hifts from lub ' and that unemployment in uranee i- not after. through a fairly long erie of 486 THE MINNE O,'A ALUMNI WEEKLY expansion and reorganization, the latiolJ, thes plan provided prolection parenLly ~., allow rather wid di cre­ modern unemployment in urance y­ for a number of worker variouJy lion t l he mem bers of the ocial e- tern charact ri ti of most of the e timated at from 50 lo 150 Lhou.and. uri: I' Board lhal is lnbli. hed by Europ an nalion have developed. All uch provi ion, therefore, cxert (li e .\ct, l lhe end thal Lhe mo t er­ France b gan provi 'ions f l' uch a an almo t infinil imal influ n e up";; Ie ti\" cooperative program may be sy ,tern in 1905, England undertook employment in ec urity. olved. In gen ral, the mo t arbi­ a urvey a a preliminary tep in Beeau e all tate I gi la li on on the trary of the ondi Lion for participation pro iding such ben fit in 1909, and ubject has been and i b :og definite­ may be de cribed a follows: other nations hav 0 generally fol­ ly hap d by the provi 'ion of the ] • 1 0 tate may begin payme t lowed the e lead that all of the Federal ocial ~ec urit , Act of 1935, of ben fil ' until two year aft r th principal Europ an nation with the any tatement of the pre. nt tatu in ' ption f the program and th x eption of Ru .ia now have fairly of unemployment in urance mu t ref r coll ction of taxe by which the re­ exten ive and inclu.iv ystem' of principall~' to lhat act. It mut be serve are e ta bli hed. Thi provi. ion public un mployment in ul:ance. I n recognized. of ('OUf, e thaL the act re­ n cc sitated amendment of the earlier Ru ia. a verv inclu ive y tem wa f 1";' l everaJ type~ of in c urity, Wi con'in law. di continued i~1 1930, on the ground among II"hi h the 1110 t imp rtant arc 2. Fund, collected by tate govern­ that there wa no need for it. old age, unemployment, maternal and ments for the purpo e of providing Whil the European nation were child health, blint!n e'~. and the de­ bencfit., and it i as umed that tate thus developing and expanding their pendency 0 children. The provi~ion may wi h Lo coll ect omewhat larg r sy tern of unemployment in. urance, of the a L with re. pect t mplo ment fun'cls than \\ ill be available from the little or no int re: t attached to the in ecurily cannot be enlirely divorced f d ral lax, mu t be deposited "ith device in the nited tate until after from th~ remain 1 r of it 'provision, th Tr a urer of the United tale-. the Worl I War. In 192 , a bill wa but their major signifi ance may be They annot be held by the tate. introduced in the Federal congre , ·ummariz cl a follow: Thi~ provi ion, incid ntally, ma~ pre­ propo ing a y tem modeled after that vent everal tat from participaling of the English, and ome twenty-one Collection of Frmds in the pr gram, for it i the opinion slate bills were introduced in the Leg­ of a number of legal aulhoriLi that i lature of variou tate in the year 1. The act provide for the col­ e rtain slate on litution mak this b fore 1932. 1 0 state took favorable I clion of fund. through a payroll lrum.Ier of ' tale fund impo ..:ibJ . action upon uch legi lation, how ver, tax, a tax that amount to 1 per 3. clequat, y Lematic re ord to until 1932, whcn Wi con in enacted cent in 1936, 2 per cent in 1937, 3 be prescribed by the Board mU et be the fir t unemploymnl in 'U!'ance law p r cent in ] 938 and lh rafter. Taxe kepl hy the ·tate admini. lralion to be provided in th nited State . are a ' ced again t all employers but participaling in lh pI' gram. Thereafter, an I up to the clo e of do not includ a their ba i ,wage of 4. The el etion of per onn I for the 1935, ten additional tate enacted worker earning more than 3,000.00 . tate admin i ~tra li on must b placed uch legislation. all of the more recenl per year, of agricultural labor, domestic 011 a level that i. ati fa lory lo the laws following approval of the Federal 'ervant , ea ual labor not in the regu­ Board. Thi provi ion i at,Z) similar Social ecurity Law of 1935 and repre- lar cour e of an employer's busine , Lo n of tho in th Wagner-Peyser enting direct re' ulls of that legi­ over 65 years of age, seamen, et und r whi h the Lale-Federal lation. t the pre ent time, therefore, governmental employee (tate or fed­ ~y lem f EmploymenL E. hang' i there are eleven tate having law eral) employec of a public carrier, et up. It advo at in i,t that iL is a providing for public compul sory un­ an I those ngaged by educational, device for removing the late y tern, employment in urance, and there is a1 0 charitablc, or cientific in Litution . from th realm of political manipula­ the Federal Social curity Act of Th se classe' are al 0 uniformly ex­ tion . 1935. It is to thesc law that one must cluded from coverage afforded by tate 5. FinaJly: atlmini tratioll of bene­ addrcs hims If in order to evaluate lhe act pa ed in conformity with th fit mu t b a function of the public pr sent tatu of unemployment in- provi ion of the federal tat ute. mploym nt en'ice if a taLe' pro­ urance in the United State. 2. Fund lhu colle ted are to b gram i to be recogniz d a a part It hould perhap be aid, before crediled back to lhe late ~hat pa of the national ystem. Thi. provi ion an attempt i made to statc briefly atisfactory unemployment III urance repre ent another device by mean~ the major provi ion of the e law, law, with the following oudition : of which the author of the bill .eek that there i some prot ction ome­ a. redit allowed cannot exceed l ecure uniformity and con i tency what imilar to that provided by 90 % of the contribution to the federal throughout the 4 tate in the atl­ public unemployment insurance a ide tax made by employ r of any statc. mini lratioll of unemployment ben­ fiL . from that involved in the e law. b. Direc t allowancc may b made There are, as ha b en uggested, u h, in brief, i Lh legi lative latu, to employer who e tabli h unusually f unemploym nt insuranc in the trade-union unemploym nt benefits. good record in holding unem ployment ome of th se date back a far a nited tate. The actual latu i at it minimum. 1831 , when tha t provided by a New much I certaiJl, for there are a host York prinler' local was in tituted. . Funds may be wilhdrawn by the of qu sLion with re p ct to il ad­ At present, however, all su h benefi t staLes for benefit only, not for ad­ mini tra tion that remain to b an \\('r­ probably do not provide coverag for mini LraLive co t . ed. In concluding lhi , bri f tat ID enl. more than 50,000 work rs. There are 1\10 t important are lh provIsIon it may be worth while to outline S01l1(, also some joint plans for un employ­ of the act a to what condition mu t of the e que tion , que tion that mu,t ment benefit , establi shed by agree­ be met by laLe that participal in be answered before unemployment in ­ ment betwcen union and employer . Lhe program. The tipulalion are surance can be given a fair chance to The , 110W vel', are imilarl y limitcd taled in rather general terms, being, demon trate its f1icacy or lack of it in coverage and do not affect mor in lhi re. pect, similar to tho e of in a i ling in the alleviation of em­ than 65,000 worker in thi co untry. the Wagner-Pey er Act, which defin . ploymenl in curity. Th r i , firsl Fina lly, there are the privale insur­ the condilion of participation on the of lil l. III problem of c 'uring MIl'­ ance plan. provid d by certain firm s. parl of lale' in the nation-wide public quatcly trained per onnel for the var- Before the enactmenL of tate legi - employmenl ervice. The idea i ap- (Continued on page 497) Benti try Coo.- e Is Lengthened

E 'T.\ L college tud nt:, will tour'd the campu. and amplifier were D spend four year probing the u,ed 0 that all might hear .. , Dean' problem of denLi~try in tead of three .\ Jlne D. Bljtz and E. E . :\ichobon year a in th pa t, it wa de id d by made their annual tour of ~1inne ota th Board of Regent at their late t bigh chool, la t week. Their itinerary meeting. Th prer qui ite requir ment included ~lountain Lake. Welk .\u. tin of lwo y ar remain unchang d. 0 and Ru hford . .. Xoel oward' "Hay that an extra year, or six year- in all Fe\'er" , t a new high in attendance will be required for a diploma from the a. the la"t ho\\-ing re,'ealed a sell-out College of Denti try. Pre ident Coff­ hou, e with ahout 30 per on turned man explained that uch a plan i be­ away . . . the first week in :\Iay wa-­ ing adopted by the majority of dental the date for the fourteenth annuai Bu,i­ chool throughout the country. Dean ne,- chool banquet. William La by in commenting on the change tated that the h avy chedule of the thre -year plan in operation tudy General College ince the fall of 1927 will probably be lightened through the addition of the Three of the official of the general fourth year. education hoard of the Rockefeller Thi' "ill not be the firt time that foundation of New York-Dr. Edmund and puhlic health .,inee ib orlmn LD the D nti try ,chool ha had a four­ E. Day. R. J. Hayighur t and John 19:?2. year course. From 1919 to 1927 the ::'.Iarshall. pent Tue' day of till week Dr. :\1axcy took hi," _\ .B. at the cour~ wa compo ed of one year of un'eying the progre. made by the George Wa"l~ington uni\'ersity in 1911. pre-dental and four year of dental cneral college under the Rockefeller hi ' ~1.D . at Johns Hopkin in 1915. work. In 1927 the prerequi 'ite was in­ endowment Thev conferred with Dr, and hi~ doctor of public health at crea d to two ycar and the dentistry :\Ialcolm '. :\1acLean. director of Gen­ John- Hopkin. in 19'1L course proper wa reduced to three eral college. and the college co-ordi­ Dr, :\Iaxcy ha' specialized in epi­ year '. nalors in discu jng per'onn I and guid­ demiology and ha- done re earch in The new .ix-year sequence. approved ance work. They also made a tour of malaria and typhoid fe\'er. He i' a Wedne.day by the Board of Regent , G neral college das e'. member of ~ igma Xi. Phi Beta Kappa. will require l\\ 0 year of pre-dental and during the world war wa' member . tudy and four year of denti try. By of a mohile unit in internal medicine. allowing an extra year of work, the Foresters "en;na at \'ariou ba'e, in the L'uited dean tated, the new plan will relieve ~ tates. many stud nt from taking _ummer The la t few weeks of June. 115 e,;;ion work in order to complete the forester. will trek to camp for former three-year cour. e. a 3-month e, ;;ion of actual fore_try B oard of R e"ent The change at ::'.linne ota wa made work. They will be enrolled a regu­ lar members during the ummer, and Among the item, of busine-, takeu on the ha~is of a study financed by up by the Bard of Rea ent5 at its the arn gi corporation and carried will return in the fall to their niver­ ~it~ , studie-. meeting this pa' t week were the fol­ on by thc American .\ 'ociation of lowinn: Dent~l chook Dean La by wa ince transportation is not provided. most of the 115 member ",;11 probably .\ lea\'e of ab ence from " eptember pre ident of the as ociation when the 16 to December 1-. 1936. and a _ab­ urvey \\'a completed in 1931. \\'ork in ::'.Iiulle'ota. although eyeral are expected to venture we tward. p­ batical furlough from December 16. pJicants are allowed to tate their 1936. to June 15. 1937. were granted Roy G. Blakey, profe - ~or in the Bu i­ Mock Convention preferen e, in the type of work and I ation. In the west the boy ' crui e ne;;" ' ellOOI. Profe' sor Blakey \yill do With national political convention timber. con tru t trail, and' en'e as research work in taxation. ab ut to hl' held next June in leve­ look-outs. In ::'.Iinnesota the work con­ Leo J. Brueckner. profe"or in the land and Philadelphia, ,tudent are ,i,h mainly of thinning and impro,,;n a ollege of Education. \\' 11' !!ranted a preparing to hold their own mo k par­ timber stand~. sa\'" Profe,,_or R . ::'.1. lean of absence for this qnarter to ley ::'. 1ay ] 5. Plan call for the field Drown of the fore~try divi ion , direct a sur\'e\' of elementan' educa­ housc as th ite of the fifty party tion for the r~lTenl.:-· iuquiry'into the rally. The com'entions are pon ored o-t and character. of education for joil~t1~, by ,igma Delta hi aud Delta iU edical Head the _ta te of ~ ew York. ~iml1a R ho. Three plaHorm are to J . Charnley :\1cKinley. profe , or and be present cd at the con\'cntion, on Dr. Kenneth F. :\IIlXCY, profl" or of head of the department of medicine, from each of the "young" political prC \'entiv mcdiein and bacteriolo!!y \\"<1$ gi\' n lea\'e from next June 1 to ('lubs on the cumpus. Farmer-Labor­ at the niversity of Virginia medical July 31 to vi~it p.ychiatric ho pital' ite,. Hepublicans and Democrats , hool, \\ill hecome head of the de­ in Boston. ~ew lork. Baltimore and .. pc. c leadcr' fl ck d lo l1rthrop pnrtm 'ut of prcventive medicine and .\ nn _\ rbor. Prore ' or ::'.IcKinky will auditorium ,teps la. t week as the ,cc­ public health here n , t yenr. Thl' posi­ study the method. of the hospitals \,1 '­ !lud anti-war mel'ling wa held. thi ­ tion \\ as Idt vacanl when Dr. Harold ited for information that might be of ~'car in lhe form of a ,trike. Speakcr" S. Diehl '1 Id wa;; promoted to be­ use in connection with a new p ' ychi­ \\crt:! Rol)('rt Mol'S' Lov,tl. r ni \'E'l'"ilv come delln of the medical cieucc". Dr. atri unit whi h i, being built here. of hicag. and Reverend Rnym n~l Diehl had been profess r and head of Frank K . Waller. professor and Vni­ B1'Ilgg, nita rian pa~t r. Sound \\ agon, tl1l' dt:'pa rtmen t of preyen ti v mediciue \'ersity librarian. was ITrauted ab.ence 488 THE MINNE OTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

from 1\lay 27 to Augu t 9, 1936, to tudy univer it)' library administration in candinavia, Finland and England and to vi it library agent and other book ellers in the e countri and France . •\ 500 gift from the orthwe t re- ~earch foundation for a tudy of man­ ganese or ,a 90 cholar'hip from an anonymou ource for an under­ graduate' in philosophy, and 85 from the l\1inneapoli Women' dverti ing Club .chobr hip loan fund, were ae­ knowledaed by the board.

M u.sical Produ.ction

Twenty of the Univer. ity inger group have turned chom, girl and other are tra-Ia-Ia-ing, bu y learning the core of igmund Romberrr' "The New loon" before their two evening performance ]ylay 1 and 2, and a matinee performance !llay 2. Earle G. Killeen, profe sor of mu ie, will direct the production . to be given in j orth­ rop Auditorium. Taking the part Grace ~Ioore and Lawrence Tibbett sang to movie fame a few year ago will be Ruth Altman and Jo-eph 1lacauley, Broadway. tar . tudent lead will be played by Eliza­ beth Hultgren. Thoma Dougherty, Jerome Buser. J ohn 1\Ion. os. Don lIaw­ kin , harle. ~Ic:'liani , Gordon Lager- trom. L. J . Fire. tone, Arthur Thorn­ ton and :'Iliriam Brown. One hundred Univer. itv students have part. in the choru e: and cast, while another core do the dancing number. PILLSBl"llY TATUE O~ TilE \K K"OLL The matinee performance aturday fay 2 will be given for Univer. ity and Twin City high school tudents. and Daily slaff:; for three year. , will be Facull~ attending were Dr. Floren e editor of Ici- -i'Iah for the coming L. Goodenough. professor of chilt! wel­ year. fare, "ho pre. ided at a symposium Fri­ A junior in the ArL coli gr, he has day eH'ning: Profe sor William T New Editors IIer n of the pycholog), department held thc position of sport- editor of the humor magazine thi year ant! has who \\a chairman of the symposium on The Board of tudent publication I arning: Profe. Hcrb rt arroll, contributed many of it leading article.'. , or announced thi week t11at Bob DeVallY , ed ucntional p -yehology, who was lo a new pap 'rman who c car cr beg;n In addition to hi publication \\ork, "lleak: Professor John E . Ander on. di­ a printer' devil in his rather's hop Harding has been a member of the .\11- r clor and professor of child welf.lfl', in Mobridge, . D ., will be next year's niv r. ity coune·i l for the pa t y ar, abo a ~pcakcr: Prof sor ::'\files .\. editor of the 1\linne ota Daily. rcpres('nlillg lhe Art. oI l 'gl'. lIe also Till hr. psychology department, \\ ho For the pa~t two year he ha b n has taken part in dramatic activitie:; \\'lts lo lalk: Dr. Donald . Pnter,on, managing ditor of the Daily. Last and had a major role in the niver ity professor of psychology; Dr. R. N El­ year he \Va awarded the Northwe t Theatre production of " Ierry Wives liott, chairman of the psychology de­ Daily Pre s a sociation cholar hip of of \\lindoI''' thi "int>r. partment. and K(,lUl th II. Baker. ill­ $100. President of igrna Delta hi , strlldor in psychology. He is a III mber of Lal1lhda Chi .\1 - profes 'ional journali. m fraternity, he pha. academic fraternity. Graduate tlldl'nt \\er Eleroy i. al 0 a member of igma hi . St romberg. Waller 1\Ic ara, J . pellcer Jean Cli fford, art college junior, and Carlson. Bclty ,rave ~ and Iargard m mber of the Literary R eview taff Psychologists . ('der. . inc \\ i Iller quarter, will guide tha t Eight proi'es or. and fiv graduate Frolll E\an~tol1. Professor Paler-on pllblicati n through it. future career . tlldenb from the p~ychology drpart­ \\ ell t to Wa hingtoll. D. .. to att(,l1d this coming year. III nt and the In. tillite of 'hild Wel­ II conference of the division of ant hro­ Wilh the winner of the po t of busi­ fare attended the meetillg of tIl Mid­ pology and p ychology of th National n s manager of ki-U-Malt till un­ \\ e"tern P~y ·hological association ill Heseareh council as the official dl'legate annollnc d, it wa decided that Edward Evan ton, Ill .. IIl ~t Friday and atur­ of tIl' .\m('ricflll Psychology a.sOCla­ Harding, a member of the ki- -Mah day. lion. \PRIL '25, 1936 1 9

Gophers Aeeept Coaehing Jobs

wo mor' member of ~Iinnesota' There i a po ibility that the T championship {ootball brigade of Gopllf'rs will play ho t to another ea t­ the pa::.t three year tepped into col­ ern team next winter. Two year ago lege coaching poitions thi · week. Minne ota played Yale in the Twin George Rcnnlx ha been named back­ ities during the hri tma holiday fi Id oach at facale ter ollege in and la. t December the .' trong Princ - , t. Paul and Milton Bruhn i the new ton team came we t to meet the ~Iin­ head baseball coach and a i tant foot­ ne otan in a erie. . Haryard and ball teacher at .\.mher t Colleg at Dartmouth are potential opponent for Amher t, Ma . rutur ' e rie~ . Bruhn performed at guard on the undefeated cleven of 1933 and 193! and wa captain of the Gopher base­ Ba eball ball team that won the Big Ten cllam­ The :\Iinne, ota baseball team, de­ GEORGE REXXIX pionship la::.t pring. He was the fending title holder. in the we tern ophomore catcher on the ~Ilnne ota confcr nee, ha. tarted the sea on "ith nine that won the conference title in an amazing di . play of ~coring. week the pring of 1933. Thu, Bruhn aw ago they trimmed Gu. tavu Adolphu~ fullback. Ray .\ntil and Frank 'Yar­ , ervice on three champiomblp quad~ by lop-sided cores in a two-game eri . ner started a't nd, for the veteran_. during hi day on the campus . . . and they opened the conference ea.,on Lou ::\Iidler and Bob Hoel were tackle, two ba eball team and one football again t Purdue aturday with the arne with Dale HaD _en and Bob Weld clnen ,\nd the . opher grid team of tactic,. !ruard~. and Bud yend~en center. 19:33 of course was undefeated. TIll" The fre"hman starting lineup con­ ~Iinne ota , tar ha. been under contract i.,uc­ her of the past three ~Iinnesota foot­ again t 'Yi,comin will be without the ball quack He wa. a leading opho­ eessful forward pas es accounted for -en·ice" of a single lettermall. There more hacldield pro, pect in 1933 but two other scores. The fro"h ola tennis "tars of recent .ea- fall . lIe i a si ting in pring practice the fre,hm n for one tou hd wn and ons. at Iacalestcr and will take work at thl' he to,sed e"ernl passes \\ hi h lul­ La"t , ea-on. Roy Huber teamed with nivl'rsity for two more quarter: to vanced the ball into 'coring position . Billy chommer to \\ in the Big Ten completl' work for hi negree. Julil' .\\Ionse "a~ too slippery for the double_ crown. Schommer al,o \Yon first year men and he crossed the goal the 1935 imliyiuuai conference title. line hI iee and Bill ::\Iathem' abo ('on­ Hockey League t nhuted two touchdowns to 'the "arity oach Brain will have t \yo former '<"oring. Brnce Berryman. rc"Cf\'e end. "tate high "cl1001 champion. in the II key i. a popular winter sport took a pas- to complete the coring array of ,;ophlllllore. wblch he will de­ In penu upon this ,ea,on. They are ::\Iinllesota and the "Cniver~ity al­ done h~ the yeteran . "ays boa. ts a ~trong team but' it is Groyer Fletcher, ~l. Pau\. 1933 state (Iifficult to build a schedule bC'Causl' TIll' memh rs of the fr hman ,quad prep titli,.t, and Paul "'ilcox. ".\Iountain \\we hig anti huky but thc~ ' couldn't few school~ in lhe middle we t support Lake. 1934 champion. match the '1)(' d and thc hln('king of the gaml' on an intercollegiate ba is. "'\Iay ~-'Yi,.con"in at ~Iinneapolis . :\lichigan and [ionc ota are now the the It'tll'rmen. The work of the first year hack. \\a, di~l\ppointing for it ::\Ia~' 1-10\\'a at ~Iinneapoli " only Big Ten ~cho()L having hockey team . was thought that sl'yeral of thl'sC :\Iay 5-Illinoi" at ~linneapolis. rtlllncr, would be able to pick up yards There i. no\\ a mo\e afoot to or"a­ :\Ia~ ' 8-"'i~con"in at ~bdi . on. :l!!ainst any opposition. niz nil international collcgiate lea"ue ~[ay 9-. ' orthwe"tern at Evanston. Inter-squad game ' "ill he hrld each which will include .\ l11l'rican and an­ ~Iay 11- hicago at hicago. /ldian telllll~ in the mid-continent area. " ek with thl' final pring practice The interested . chool. at the moment game ,chl'duled for ~Iemorial tadium ~Ia' lS-Lutht'r o1\egt' . Decorah. 10wa:at ::\Iinneapoli .. are ::\ [iehignn, ~[innesotn. ~Il higan btt' in ~Iay. T'ch. thc niversity of Maniloba and The ,larting \'ar,.it~ ha('\..fil'ld in the "'\Iay 16-'Yinona Teacher- l'ollege at the Uni\"l?r~ity of W'c,tern Ontario. Thl' first ~amc included _\ nd~ l'ram amI ~[inneapoli_ . ~IllTlitoba team has bcen on the Min­ .Julic _\ lfon'l' at the halve" Haryey :\Iay ~1. ~~. -!3-Bi!! Ten l'Onferl'llCe l\e~(Jta chedule for sevcrtll year. Rin .. at

Tbe MI~N~SOTA I . ill al. 0 be call d upon Lo tak part in lh pre nla­ Lon of t hour es. The adulL eelu ation program being inilial d at ::\finne 'ola will be \Val hed wilh int r', L nol only b ' ALUMNI ~o ~o,,~~\i}) WEEKLY alumni and olh r. in lhis tate hUl by educ;lOl:" ~~ , lhroughoul lhe enlir counlry. The lerm "adull edll­ cat ion" ha b en liS d . glibly and in connection Published by wilhuch a wide variely of programs in rec nt yeal ' ~ The General Alumni Association of the thal il ha been worn lhreadbare. It i. to be hop d University of Minnesota lhal a new d criptiv term will b found for the ilIinn sola exp rimenl in whi h the attempt will be WILLIAM S. GmsoN, '27, EditoT and Business AIa1Ulger made to provicl information alongpecific cultural LOIUlNE SKINNER '36, A ••iBtant Editor and profe ional line. Vol. 35 April 25 1936 No. 28 IlE an i nl campus feud bel\\'e n the Miner alld lhe Engineer ha become a lhin of the pa"t Issued on Saturday of each week during the regular .es.ion, from T September to June, and monthly during July and Auguot. Entered as "ilh both h 01 now in Iud d in lh Inslitul of second class matter at the post office at Minneapolia, Minnesota. Life subscription with life membership In the General Alumni A •• o· Technology. Thi ~pring, student or"anizalion~ are ciation are $60. Yearly .ubscriptions are $3. Subscribe with central office s eking to bury anoth r old lradilion . .. the annual or local secretaries. Office on the campus is 118 Administration Building. Telephone: Main 8177. 1 ajama parade. La t ~' ear con id rable damage wa ... done I y the indivitlual who l ok parl in th noc­ OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS l urnal prowl and fourt n >it utlenb \\ er baperoned ORREN E. SAPFORD. '10L, Pr.8id.nt...... _ .... _. ... _ .... _ .... _.... Minneallolis ERLING S. PLATOU, '20Md, Vice·Pr.siMllt .... _...... __ ...... Minneapolis from the sc ne of the o-call d parade by city police­ TKos. F. WALLACE, '98, '96L, Tre48Urer...... _.... _ .... _.... _.... _ .... Minneallolis men. E. B. PIERCE, '0', E",.""ti"8 S.cr.tarv ...... _...... _ ...... _.. .. _. ...St . Paul The III 11 in Pioneer Hall and oth r group ... ahout the campus have taken leps to PI' venL anolh r parade. Alone lim th re wa a 111 v af ol lo ub­ ~tilule . ome other type of 0 a ion. It i., prol abl lhat the force of public opinion will uiseollrag an~ midnight march thi pring. EXT Oclober the Uniyer~it\" of illinnesola will N have a new huilding which' will be the hom of a new educational project .. . a deparlment of adult IlE Minnesola atbl Li endowment fund \\ ill he education. The pre nt activities of an adull educa­ T l up on June ~30 wh n sixly per e nl of th n l tion nalur uch a . night cia. e and c rre pondence income from alhletics during th pa:;l year will be set cou rses and "cHiou - form. of communilY service are a. ide a principal. The ndowmenl plan adopl d h,\ now carried on by the Gcn ral Exten. ion Divi ion. the Board of Reg nls in farch al 0 lipulales Lhal Whether th new' project \\"ith it building will be­ 40 per e nt of th net incom of the year be placed come a eclion of the ext n ion divi ion or a separale in all athlelic re erv fund. On an\" Jun 30 in uc- and di -tinct department of lhe Univer ily it ha not ed ing years when thi r ery fund lotals more be 11 announced. than $40,000 the adclilional money will be placed ill The activities and the d velopment of the adult lhe principal fund. education project will of our e be of a particular Th principal um of cour~e will be a permanenl intere t to alumni. In lhe pa t lhe graduate have fund antl the income will be u. ed fol' l he support and had oc asion to relurn to the campu for Homecom­ d velopmenL of the procrram of physical educalion ing, Alumni Day_ clas reunions, peeial college din­ al lh niv r it". "Vhen lhi~ incom is nol needed ner ' and other event of a ceremonial naLur . The for . uch purpo e' it will b add d to the principal. adult educalion program will offer alumni the oppor­ tunity to conlinu lheir lraining in their pecial pro­ The $40,000 re erve fund may be tlrawll upon ill fe . iOllal ancl bu ine 's field during their campus ca of emergen ie wh n the income from various vi its, . oure including the gal l' eipl i nol greal enough Lo pay the regular expen e' of the program of phy. ical The new building which i heing erected on lhe education for m nand inl rcol1egiate alhl tics. parade ground facing Pill bury Hall will be a center of post-lTradualc activity. The building will I e Th adoption o[ this nclowmenl plan at finnc· equipp d with a dining hall and with living quarler~ sola S I've. Lo in ur th cOlltillU d op ralion and de­ for ome eighly studenls. In il will he h III short velopment of the minor sporLs and the general pro­ ourse for val'ioll profe. iOllal and bu ine grou ps. gram of phy ieal educalion for all men stud nls 011 No credit will b offered. The work to be PI' s nl d lhe eampu". F olban, of COUl'. , as the l>i~ incomt' will be of the "check-up" nalure for lh h nclll of sport. ha been called upon Lo provide funds for llic men and womcn who wi~h 1.0 be informed on lh operation of th olher clivi ion. of the alhlctic pro­ late t dev lopments in lheir cho en field. AILhough gram. If lh lime hould come \Vh 11 football fail no final annOllllcement ha been made on the maller, Lo draw Lhe larg crowd iL do s al pI' senl, lh 11 1\1 ill ' it i a . afe as umpLion that members of lh faeultie. ne. ola ean draw upon lhe income from the endo\\ ­ of the various college will deliver lhe Ie lures and menl for the ontinuation of ils extensive athletic lead lhe eli ' cussion group. , Lay leader, undoubledly, program. \ PfllL ':2.>, 1 9~6 491

The Town end plan, according to Mr. chmidt, " would probably break down our taxystem completely" if The Reviewing Stand put into operation. "Xo country .has w. s. G. ever taxed itself rich," he add, POlllt­ ing out that money pent by pensioner L 1\1 ' I who were tudents on the Excavation no\\ being made into under the Town end plan would have A campu during the early day of the lime tone ledge on which the lab­ to be taken from the younger people, the niversity tell of the cooperative oratory will land are again bringing to on whom would fall 0 heavy a burden boarding enterpri e of that era which light the antiquated machinery which of taxation that their own expenditure enabled them to atlend chool on a wa abandoned by the city when a new would be greatly reduced. small a urn as 2.50 a week. orne site wa cho

If he return d now, she would like well hall will b u. d to face the build­ training in home economic, and, of ing, it wa announced. Alumnae Sketches cour e, electricity. oe,n't think there Do(·tors fr m hicago, Iowa and are any advantage of thc "good old JOl' thlH' ·tern univer itie and the med­ days," but could tell better if she ical school at t. Loui gathered at the returned to chool again. Both timcs niversity last w ek a guest of the Emily Kneubuhl she did return, .ay shc, ~h became Medical schooL They were repre enta­ t n years younger. There were three thing a woman tive of the Central Clinical Re. earch could do "back when" if he need d Hobbies . . . like persons who re­ club which meets twice a year to keep Lo earn her own way or yearn d to be ceive one foreigrf .tamp and decide in louch with re earch work in internal a careeri t-teach, nurse, be librarian. to start a collection, he took up medicine at the variou schools On collecting famous , ignature hecau e the pro"ram weI' Dr. Ruth E. Boyn­ Emily Kneubuhl '~3Ed decided to ,he received uch intere ling letters. ton. Dr. K 'ilhelm tenslrom, of thc become a teacher, and began her Her collection ha gro"n and grown. hiochemi. try department; Dr. B. J. career in Minneapolis chool. She law on of the pathology department; might still be teaching iI it had not Although her degree came in 19~3, her undergraduate day were rno tly Dr. E. T . Bell, h ad of the department been for the World War which taught of pathology; and Dr. E. A. Boyden, her she could speak. in Pre ident Northrop' regime She left chool during her enior year, profes.'or in anatomy. "The war jigged me out of teach­ when he wa pre ident of the W .. G.A. Dean Malcolm 1\1. \ ille" and Dr. ing," she explains. "War camp com­ to become principal of a school. Ralph D . Casey, chairman 'of the de­ munity service led to the League of "I had Cyru Northrop as my first partment of journali. m, have been Women Voters and much speaking, named to the council in the divi ion which came easily." president and that opportunily to have him greet me on the campu was of public opinion I' earch for the n w Although he had a mo t succc ful real!" she declare, in de cribing tho e magazine. "Public Opinion Quarterly." career as teacher and principal, he year. "Dr. Burton, l\Iary Grey Peck to be publi. hed by the Prmceton uni­ became sought aIter for speaking en­ and Dr. France quire Potter de­ versity pre... In addition lo fa ulty gagements and left the teaching field . veloped my imaginalion and helped member~ or variou college through­ In 1920 she began three year of what I had to fly to the kyo Only out the country. tbe council will in­ service for the l\Iinne ota League of .\lice hevlin hall wa built." Proper clude Walter Lippman; ,eorge Gallup, Women Voters where he fir t WOIl coed dre included gay '90 hirt waist director of the\merican In. litute of recognition in public affair . and big hair bow . PlIhli Opinion, and A. LaWTence Then sh conducted campaign for Lo\\e]), former president of TIarvard Glad he went to the Univer ity of univ r ity. city manager governments . . . in )Iinne ota? "Ye, one thou~and yes­ Cincinnati during 1924, and in Ro­ e. ," he affirms, "and e pecially when F. tllart hapin, chairman and

Lahey recently gave ,an evening party. Partie fill the ocial calendar of Mary K. he . to be married April 25 to Charle- ~I . awyer ... :1Iarlys ~·\.~~W~e~ Han on. bridesmaid-lo-be. entertained ... )Iargaret Watt and Jean Pike OLDIl G her nose fa~t to lhe at her own ninetieth birthday party, aJ 0 were hoste e at an evening party H grindstone the e da.y i 11r. Maud wa bonored at Delta Gamma sorority ... and ~Iarion Ives invited gue ts Hart Lovelace '13Ex, who i. making up Founder' Day banquet Friday, April Ior a dinner party Friday April 17. fOT a delay d lart tlli winter on her 18, at the ~1inikahda Club. Helen The following evening.llIi J ane a~d new novel-lo-be, about Fairmont. Minn., Haine- wa toa tmi tre . Toa. t were Alice Wright gave a party at theIr by working "extree hard." "Now ~1r. given by Mr . ~1. J. Tate, ::\Ir'. John home. ~Ii, ' Jane Wright will be Lovelace and 1, the book anti the ~lcDani I and :l\1ary Kitt. ~lr. maid of honor and 1IIi" Ive a bride - baby are piling into tbe car and head­ Philip Bingenheimer wa, general ar­ maid . . . A " un" party at which ing for harle ton where we hope to rangement. chairman. Evelvn Elwell wa hostes', feted both round it (th novel) into hape," he ~li : lve and Marv Edward , al 0 wrile. Governtng Boords a bride-elect . . . aI'0 in the past is he ba. had a record of a novel a shower given by )larion anders almo t every two year ince 111' . Frank N. Edmonds (Irene and a buffet upper by )lary Edward. 1926 \\'b n he wrote "The Black Radcliffe '06) will balance Minneapolis The bridal dinner will be given April ngel ," followed it by "Early Candle­ Woman' club account during the 23 at the Curti hotel. lighl" in 1929, "Petticoat Court" in next year . . . other on the late of ] 930, and "The Charming ally" two office; {rom the alumnae are Mr. year laler. H . D. Kilgore (Helen 1. Koenig '01. Meetings '02Gr), to be chairman of the civic ~li~ses Harriet and Yetta Goldstein New Officers and ocial department: and ~Ir. opened their apartment to alumnae Jo.eph E. Finley (Sarah )1. Pre ton of Phi Up ilon Omicron Thur day. Mi Yera Cole i the choice of lhe '07), who will manipulate the edi­ April 16. peaker were Orinne John­ nominatinC7 commiltee of the Alumnae tor's , he>lr and pa te-jar for the Bulle­ son of uThe Farmer' Wife" taff. club for ""madam pre~ident" dllrin~ tin. Isabel Brown of the Lynnhur t Girls th~ next t\\'o year.. Olh 'r on the Ethel Wilk received the speaker' club. )lr ~. " (men C. Waite who poke .JaIl' who were elected at the gue_t introduction at the alumnae meeting on her trip to Geneva, and Dorothy day luncheon meeting April 18 are of igma Delta Tau at the home of Amy who di cu, ed work of a nutri­ Mi~ Dorothy Leahy for carre ponding l\Irc. amnel Cohen. 1I.Iarian Segal tion adyi or. In charge of upper ar­ secretary: Ii s Do;ia Dietz, tren mer; \Va a sistant hoste . rangement. wa ::\Ir. Jo eph Pike who 1\lr .. Earl cut on, fir t director; 1\1rs. l\Ir . Robert Wilder i alumnae prexy had tIle a sistance of lice Humphrey, E. telJe Ingold, econd director: l\Ii of Kappa Alpha Theta ince her iu- Ethel Reeve. Genevieve John"ton. Be-" Laura Henri, 'ccond vict; preiuent: tallation Tuesday April H . ~Ir ". Rowe and RUtII Hall. and. co-chairman of the publicity com­ Lloyd Lynch wa bo te _ to the alum­ mittee, l\Ii · ~Jarion Boags. The e A "cookie shine" party for Mrs. nae. Other officer in talled included offices hnve two-vear term .. Ruth Barrett .... mith of Grand Forks. i\Irc. H . P . ~lcCrimmon, vice-presi­ For one year' ... fir t "ice pre'i­ X D .. who vi,ited at the Pi Beta Phi dent: lIIr . H.)1. peier. treasurer: ~01'ority hOll e recently. wa" among denl, li~s 'Edna Cockburn: a sistant Ellen Hulbert. ,ecretary. and Eleanor corre.pending .ecr lary. Mr. A. L. entertainment by the chapter to honor ~hn\\'. editor. Burdick: and recording ,ecrelary, l\1i "S lheir "uest, the grand "ice-pre ident Lucille [cGuire. of the sorority. 1\. rOLlnd table eli 'cus ion on how to Weddings igma Delta Gamma. honorary 0- wrile and wll re to market _hort tOf­ cial ~e T\'ice orori tv. laid coYer- for ie was lh "",hat" in the new of the Aftcr their n'edding Mondny night twenh'-Iour new ~embers at it an­ Twin CiLY alumnae meeling of Th ta April 13. 1111'. and 1111' .. \YiIliam Bevan nual "din ner ju t held at which the Sio'D1u Pl;i, honorary and profe "ional ( yneva lIIm·tin) wended lheir \Y:lY to no,-jtiate n'ere gue L of honor. journalislic ~ororjty on Wedne. dny. Ne\\ Orlean: where lilT. Benlll. former Officer for the coming year "'ere bal­ April 25. al lhc home of Mr . Ray­ Gopher and .\II-American guard. will loted upon at the 'upper meeting of mond .\ . Rice. 1\1rs. Walter . Robb. be line coach at Tulane Univen.ity. Delta Delta D Ita a.lumnae Tue"day, who spcaks from the experience of Tri Dell si tel' )Ir;.. Ru~, e ll Lind­ April H. at the chapter house. )£8. having had published everaJ of her gren played a program of m 1I. ic be­ Karl W. ,\nd r on. president of the shorl , tories in national magazinc. fore the eremony which look place alliance. pre ided. )Ir . Arthur D. and l\Ir .. Percy W. DOllo\·an. critic at 8::)0 in .. t. 1IIary' Episcopnl church. Henning"en. who p lIt po, t-gradua­ of the pen group of the Minneapolis illillue.ll polis. The bride wore the "'cd­ lion veal', at her bOUle in ~ha u~hai, Colle~e Women's luh. conductcd lhe ding gOWll o{ a bride of last Jun~. 1111'S. China. talked on "The Foreigner' ~Life literary confcrence. They eli CLlSS d Eugene Olson tDorothy Gould). La· in hanghai." A ~s i ting l\Ir . Carl E. JllOdel'~l trcnds ill mngazinc ficlion Verne Fu~ter \las only ullcmiallL Ior Hallulll with the • upper were l\Imes. technique nnd melhod, of marketing her cou,'in. Vernal ' (Babel LeVoir Eldon )Iasol1, B . Paul Davie. Edward slories. !1 ntl also read ~el etion. from \\;(. be~l man. Psherl' includcd Jny ~ote .te(' n. Haney Yanti:, Joseph the \\TiLing ' of pen group members. Bev1ln. L1Il1J'el1 e ::\lar·tin, ,eorge lIIa1'­ o borne. L. C. Li;.hcrne s, George Dorothy Kuechenmei tel'. A. O. Pi. lin. Glen 8ei([01, James TrainOl' and Roberlson. John Feene~·. ::\Ianley Cal­ pre 'idt'lIl' of the active chaptet' uf ,\lli,on Harris. lender. and barle llo~· t. Theta ,igma Phi, s\;:(>tched plans for For Jeannette Lockwood who_e D1ur­ .\lphn Xi Delta met for the fort~·­ llH' ~Ialrix banCJuel lo be spon:ored ri:llTc lo John H. mith. Jr.. take~ place third founding anlli\'er ary April 17 by Lhe aClive rhnpter. April '25 . . . a buffet upper by

1904 in the legislatur ,a village attorney • • • • and pr i

TlIberclIlo i 0 i Ly of hica~o and 1930 & ompany. The fir~t of thi year be the Iowa Tub rculo i. as ociation at became editor of the Harl ::\lagazine urelia J. chwei,. '30N will re­ Fort Dodge, Ia. group and head of it rucago office. linqui. h her title of a . i tant uperin­ ::\Ii_ Wyckoff, a direct de cendant tendent of nul' e at ::'Iladi on General of Peter ',",,"ckoff who wa one of tbe 1921 ho pital on June 20 when he will fir t citizen.' of ~ew York. i a gradu­ Dr. L. J Pankow 'QI1\ld of ioux marry Jo, eph E. )Iaroney of Peoria, ate of the Horace ::'IIann _cbool and Falls, . D. \Va principal peaker al TIL )1r. ::'IIaroney wa. graduated from Welle ley College. In 1934 be re­ the annual founder' clay banquet of Georgetown niver.ity. ceived a ma ter' · degree in physic Phi 'hi medical fraternity at the Katheryn There e Doyle 'SOB, wbo from and is a for . orne time wa re earch a i tant in njver~ity la t month. member of tbe staff at Bryn ::\Iawr the employment in titute at the Uni­ Dr. '21D and ~lr . Vernon D . Smith college. (Florence Tippert '24) and tbeir on, ver ity, and Kennetb etre '28B choo e Early fall will be the date of tbe Nipp rl. of t. Paul, Minn., ate Easter May 9 for tbe date of their marriage. wedding to take place at the Riyerside Maynard Rue '30Ex and Kathryn dinner at tbe home of Mr. and 11' . Cburch, with Rev. Harry Emerson ~lorri on t their wedding month B. II. mitb of Wayzata, Minn. Fosdick officiating. as July. )1r. Rue, Pi Kappa AJpha, Dr. '_I1\ld and ~1r. \Villard C. To return to t. Paul i Pauline fir t attended ~1acale tel' ollege. )fj Peter_on and their two on, Willard Fletcher '32. T after her marriage ::'IIay Morri on ha ' been a tudent at arle­ arl amI David John, were gue ts of 23 to Dr. herwood R. teadman '32D. )lrs. Peter on' parents, Dr. and l\lrs. ton ollege and i now a enior at The wedding will take place in Ware )1i Wood' Kinderuarten Trruning ~. L. Werner of Red Wing, )linn., cburch, Glouce.ter county. Va. for Easter unday. cbool. Henry J. Fletcher, father of the 1931 bride-t;'be, wa formerly a profe SOl' 1922 in law chool bere. Rev. 'SIGr and ::\lr . Paul Eucbtbau­ Dr. teadman i a Princeton alum­ Dr. Irving E. eth '22D of eattle, en (Regina Joe ting '3IEd) announce nus, and ha. done graduate work at \Va h .. ~ a reccntly elected pre ident the birth of tW'in daughter ' born ::'IIon­ tbe 'Cniversitie of ~linne ota and Illi­ (If the cattle Di trict Dental ociety. day, pril 6. nOl . An Ea. t r wedding ... for Margaret Bernice King '32 entertained a group 1924 Riede el '31B wbo wa married in of ber piano pupil in ::'I1inneapoJi­ l\Iu. catine, Iowa to Kenneth tewart unday. Pauline Iyrdal '21N, who bad been ampbcll of Iowa City, Iowa. Dr. rr \\ itll the Red ro ' nur 'ing service L. L. Wei. , an uncle of the bride, of­ The ",eddin of Roger J . Haye '3eE, ill Fort Wayne, Ind .. for tbe pa t six ficiated at the ceremony held in tbe Pru Delta Theta. and ::'Ilargaret Emily ycars, died January 22 at tbe Lutheran Fir t l\Iethodi t Epi copal church at Neibel, a !!Taduate of Macale ter Col­ hospital there. . Iuscatine, before an altar banked with lege, will be an event of the late sum­ Ea ter lilie . The bride carried her mer. 1925 mother'- wedding handkercruef. Loi Ruth Druck '32B. member of fter a reception at the home of Beta Gamma igma, bonorary com­ Dr. Alano E. Pierce '25 ld, Minot, Dr. and Mr . Wei, Mr. and :Mrs. merce ororit\', and Bert Hoffman i D., died March 16 after an iUnes Campbell traveled on a .hort wedding 'S3Ex will bav"e an early summer wed­ or only a few day of pneumonia. Dr. trip. They will be "at bome" in ding accordjng to new of their en­ Pi ere \Va 35 year old. Iowa Citv, Iowa. gagement announced by M.i s Druck' Donalci H. Dabel tein 'SlEd com­ parent . 1928 bine the materiali tic tudie of busi­ ne and commercial ubjects with the 1933 )Iab I L. Lar on '28N, formerly of chool band at Litcbfield, l\1inn. Three orority i ters received in the General ho pital in linneapoli, start­ reception line after the marriage of ed her dutie as part-time a -i tant of 1932 Evadene Burri '32. 'S3Gr and Gustav )li Ella Butzerin, director of tbe wan on '30Ed, 'SeGr, a member divi ion of public health nursing on Evelyn Wall 'S2P started this montb of the faculty at the University of April 15. lj Lar. on i taking over in the new po ition a teacher of ma­ Maine. Tri-Delt Mr . llichard Hutcb­ her work a a result of tb ocial teria medica, drugs and olutions to in on (Jo epbine Pea e 'SS). Mr . eurity act pa ed recently. The in­ tbr e cia e of tudent nur es at the Arthur McGuire and Bertha Irwin '33 creas in enrollment in the divi ion of hospital of the sister of the Holy Cros were the orority si ters of l\1r. wan- of public health nursing and the ex­ in alt Lake Cit\,. Utah. be ha. on at the reception. tended public health center here ha~ charge of the di pen ary in tbe 225 The marriage took place at the home added to the work of l\lj Butzerin'~ bed ho pital. of the bride' brother and i ter-in­ divi ion. Whil a~sUinrr her, Mi. onslance Johmlon 'S'lUc of ew law. l\1r. '':? E and .l\1r . •1rthur Price Larson "ill on ti n lIC work Ior ber York cro s-rountried in her own plane Burri (l\larjorie )lerritt 'SOB). with bachelor of ~cicncc degree in public to Mound. )linn .. for a visit with Mr. health nur ing. and fr •. Ri hard P. Gale at Wiekham Dr. Richard . Raine officiating. Mrs. Farm. Burri was matron of honor and only attendant. " 'alter J . Breckenridg'e 1929 Engaged . . . arlyle E . Ander.on 'SQB, Kappa igma. head of the '34Gr wa be t man. Dr. harles L. cIon '29D and hicago office. of the Hart Magazine .\mong out-of-to~' n gue ts Donna lrubel', boLh from Fergn. group, and l\Ii Elizabeili Hervey Gertrude oxe" '2i, '2 Gr and Hazel Fulls, l\linn.. weI' married Thur day Wyckoff of W' York ity. according Halloran 'SO, botb of hicago. afternoon, pril 9, at Hennepin Avenue to announcem nt in ew York paper. Grover W. For ter 'o3Ex, Phi Kappa ll,thodist Episcopal church, with the Formerly of Henning, linn., fro ... igrna. married pril 4 to Florence Rev. Richard C. Raine. officiating. A.nder on has been in hicago ince a Parker. flew from Baltimore, Md., to Jussllllltr R~lY F .•\rchcr '28 erved year aft>r graduati n in a sales pro­ ... auk Center, linn. for the wedding. II~ best man. motional capa ity for Marshall Field His father-ill-law, W . r. Parker of 496 THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY

linneapoli , was be t man. The one returned to l'Ilillneapoli. \\ here he ha. bridal attendant wa Mi Rosamond a position wiLh Electrolux ompany Parker, iter of the bride, home for Faeulty Profiles Margaret Janet nueron ':HDII her pring vacation from Hood Col­ \\ho wed. G. Don Wenn rylin '34Ex lege, Frederick, Md. on ~Iay 9, is being honored with sever­ After a two-week wedding trip in Profes or Emer. on P. chmidl of al parlies ... one by ~lary Jane Ring the south, Mr. and l\'[r . Fo ter will fill economic was born OIl lhe Fourth of In t \\ eek. in th "return after 5 days" space at July-in anada, at Tavi tock, On­ Ruth cofield '3i g and J. Clair Baltimore, Md. Mi Parker i a tario. rm trong aid "I do" aturday, pril former tudent of Goucher College. He graduated from Ta vi .. tock high 25 . een in a local campus eat- hop ... chool in 1919, "top" in chola. tic Robert Kurtz '3 tE, who graduated in Betty Mulvehill Gartner '33 of Preston, average for his clas , and received a architectural engineering, ha obtained Minn. scholar hip to North entTal college, a palent on a p ychrometric !ide rule Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Lind ay Galla­ Naperville, TIL, graduating from there which he ha invented and which ha, gher (Audrey Kay Steven on '33) in 1923. received the approval of leading men hive returned to their home at Mount vear later he earned a rna ·ter' in the field of heating and ventilating. Hermon. 1\la s., after a two weeks' degre~ from the Vniver ity of Toronto, The lide rule i now being manufac­ visit in Boston. and there decided to enter the teach­ tured by the Keuffel and E ser om­ Harriet Evelyn Harri on '33Ed who ing profe ion. pany. taught after graduating at Adrian, Began a a istant profe or of eco­ Dr. 1. G. Erics on '34,Md. formerly Minn., moved last year to Slayton, nomic at 1arquelte Univer ity. In of hicago, ha opened offices at Long Minn., where he is commercial in­ 1926 started work on his Ph.D. degree Prairie, Minn. structor. at the Univer ity of Wi con in, teach­ Miriam We t '31Ag of Detroit, Mich,. Ruth M. Hal tead '33Ed left Osceola, ing a graduate as istant until 1928; was back in town vi iting her parents, Wi ., where she taught English, glce he received the degree la t year. Mr. and Ir . Rodney We t, of 't, club, drama, and took charge of the 10ving to the we t coa t, he wa Paul. the other day. library, for Jefferson, Wi ., to in truet as i tant profes or of economics at Engli h and speech clas es. the niver ity of Oregon from 1928 1935 until 1930, when he was claimed by 1934 Minne ota. Dorothea Lund '35B teaches com­ Contributed to "linne ota Tax mercial ela es at Elbow Lake, linn .. Completed mural-covered walls on tudie-'" made by Profe sor Blakey, how to balance hook, typing and the third floor corridor of th fain and ha written on numerous topic, 110rlhand. Engineering building pay tribute to acial and economic . . . railroad taxa­ Archi tone '3sE and Marcella the work of three years by N. Hilli tion, the Supreme Court, child labor, lark '37Ex are divulging the ecret Arnold '34UC, deaf, now employed a tariff, and puhlic debt to name a that they were married about a year in truetor in modeling at the Minne­ few . His pamphlet on "Old Age ago. apolis Institute of Art . Security" published by the University Jane Gamble '3sEd i Ii Librarian Arnold, who perhap owe his per­ Press appeared la t we k; "Indu trial to J tier on junior highchool pupil' sistence with his project to the fact Relations in the rban Transporta­ in Minneapoli . that hi concentration wa not dis­ tion" will be publi hed in the near Kathryn Kl in hmidt '35Ed teache rupted by sounds or noi e, began the future. a aciology, . ci nee and mathematic murals while a student in 1933. Though In pare moment does wood-turn­ combination of elas at ando, . D. he worked evenings and aturday ing in hi home-work 'hop which i Leon Hamlet 'ssE and harlotte afternoons, and after graduation kept equipped wilh electric motor and lathe Granger announce their recent mar­ working for 2 year without compen­ Laying a black of wood on th lathe, riage. sation, he wa not able to put his he fashion it into a platter, lamp base, K nnclh perry '35E" and Dorothy chalk and charcoal away until April or a h tray. When summer com s, he imon of filwaukce, Wi" middle­ of thi year. hunts up rod and reel, and goes to ai led it nol 0 long ago. The murals which represent piclorial­ his farm a hort cii lance from M:ilaca Virginia Kivit '35Ed hold litera­ Iy the work of the various engineering lo enjoy the fi hing sea.son on Ann ture and grammar elas e at Little profe ions repre ented in the niver­ Lake. Fall~, linn. sity were completed before Engineer' aron arlberg '35E, with the Day, which fell on April 17. They Ander en Frame corporation of till­ were first outlined in charcoal on largc water, linn .. ha been ,ent to New sheet of paper and complcted in Marjory Hollister '3 lEx of Prescott, York as a salesman. colored chalk. Panel, when done, were Wi " and Erne t Henry Uovemeyrr J. H . Willox 'ssE. i at the nation" tran f rred to the correct po itions in '35E, '35B, of Erie, Pa., will be mar­ capital with tlte rural electrification the wall and sprayed with a fixative. ried in Pre cott May 12. 1i s Hol­ commi sion. Arnold, who, handicapped by deaf­ Ii ler i a member of Delta Zeta, while June ,\delc Ander on 'S7Ex, \\ ho was ness, was unable to attend lecture ifr. Hovemeyer belongs to Acacia marri d aturday. pril 18, at Henne­ cla s s, excelled in laboratory course fraternity. pin Avenue Melhodi. t Epi copaJ while a student in the School of Archi­ An Ea Ler engagement and a J un church, to Li'ulenant J 1m N. hortley, tecture. wedding for Mary Eileen Donohue '31 will b come an Iowan after moving Mildred Weld '34Ed and Clifford Ex and George Palmer De Long II, lo her new home al Des Moincs. Slrecd were married April 11 in 1\1in­ '34E bolh of Minneapolis. Mis Dono­ Lieulenant horLl y was graduaLed neapolis, with threc isler of the bride hue att nd d the Vi itaLion onvenl from thc lew 1\1 xi 0 Military chool in the wedding parly. Dr. Mahlon and Lhe niversity of finn ota ... at Ro well, . 1. Weld '30D wa named usher. After i a member of Alpha Gamma Delta To b married.... leahelle Comer a wedding trip north, they will make sorority. Mr. DcLong will pass cigar '35Ex on fay IG in Mayflower om­ their home al 1614 Twenty-second to Phi Kappa P i fraternity hrothers. munity church, linncapo\is, Lo Dr Avenue N., l\1inneapoli ... about Henry Ibrecht '3iE", who ha spenl L. n. Woldllm of Decorah. Iowa. Dr April 20. th pa t month in Hawaii, ha. jusL Woldum i' a graduate of Luther 01- APRIL'.!.). 19S6 497 lege at Decorah, Iowa and of the fiI­ ver ity of Iowa. Nina A. Ander on 'snld, who is completing her intern hip in pediatric A New Course in Adult Education at the incinnati G neral ho pital, will complete th year with a two-months service in the medical ward . SUMMER STUDY Marlin W. Michie Ex, Delta Tau Delta, and Marian nloinette cheimo set their wedding date a May 2, in the Fifth Avenue ongregational church In Vacationland of Minneapolis. Ir. Micbie lives in • Enjoy the s cenic beaut ies and recreational delights of the land of ten Au lin, linn. thousa nd lakes while studying next summer. Minneapolis is the gateway Howard chleiter 'S5E, re earch fel­ to one of the Na tion's greatest summer playgrounds. low in the department of tructural engineering, ha re"igned to accept a po t a in tructor of agricultural en­ • gineering on the farm campu faculty. Replacing him i Edward F. Graves Graduate Courses for Teachers 'S5E. with New Master's Degree for Course Work Only Harold cheie 'S5l\IdB, who i erv­ ing a two year intern hip at the ni­ at the ver ity of Penn ylvania ho pita!. has been appointed a i tant chief medical UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA officer at the ho pita!. These courses include Adult Education, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, • Mathematics, Sociology, Child Welfare, Industrial Education. Public Health, Home Economics, Physical Education, Play Production, .Iusic Insnrance 'ind many others. Full credit tow'3.rd Baccalaureate or Advanced De­ (Continued jraln page 40'1'11) grees is given for summer work in all courses. New cour es in the iou- functions in volved in actuarial. General College. All departments, laboratories and research facilities planning, and admini trative divi ions are open and at your service during the ummel'. of the new service'. Where i such per_onnel to be found, and how can it b atisfactorily elected? There arepccific que lion ' a ' to what length • of henefit period and wailing period are be:.t adapted to need , in this coun­ TWO TERMS try. There are que tions a' to how June 15-July 25 lhe fumls may be kept-lhe facl that July 25-August 29 their amount may run into the tens of billion of dollar and that they may ha\'e to be held in fairly liquid form make that problem particularly dif­ Exceptional Advantages ficult. There is the que tion of the 250 Selected Educators comparative level of benefit payment and wages, a que tion who e answer Special Lectures may readily mean much as to the Plays and Excursions ultimale ocial and economic eITect, 600 Courses of tllr whole progrnm. There i the A Great Reference Library que tion a lo \\ho ~hould contribute to Advanced Degrees tile state fund, worker, employer, Moderate Fees or both. a que tion upon wbich thr Low Living Costs ' talc have thus far almost equally divided. Finally, there i the wbole que tion a to whether th' insurance will prove a means of reducing or A Suggestion ... prolongillg depresioll , a que tion up­ You may And it convenJent to enroll for the second term after returning on which tudent h re and abroad finn from the N .E .A. Convention at P ortland, Oregon. til rn elve quite unable to agree. The problem of in ccurity of employ­ m nt ha attracted the wide pread and eri u attention of citizen' every­ • whrcr for several yeur . Th problems Wri te for Complete Bulletin invoivrd in di eo,'ering the un wers Director of Summ er S ession , D ept. A i to these UIlUIl 'wel'ed questions with re,pc t to unemployment in ' uranc mu~ prove equally iutere.,tin' lind UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA inlri~uinlT to those "h find their in­ ter!' h turning in the dir etion of eco­ Minneapolis, Minn . nomic and political question of the imlllediate future. Financial Condition of The Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company December 31 , 1935 Fifty -Six th A nnual Statement Assets Liabilities Cash - --- - $ 1,670,413.22 Reserves on Policies - - $29,039,491.70 Bonds: Claim awaiting proof - 190,905.86 United States Government $1,994,239.30 State, Canadian, Reserved for unreported Municipal - 6,023,129.61 claims --- - - 50,000.00 Railroad -- 2,581,310.93 Public Reserved for Taxes (payable Utilities -- 5,539,865.67 in 1936) ------185,200.00 Industrial and Miscel- Dividends for Policyholders - 1,345,092.21 laneous 268,912.12 16,407,457.63 Stocks 1,666,835.64 Mortgage Loans: Interest paid in advance - - 141,070.26 City - -$2,297,646.07 Farm --- 952,005.82 3,249,65l.89 Premiums paid in advance Loans to Policyholders -- 6,313,107.86 including Premium Deposit Real Estate (Inc!. Home Office Bldg.) ----- 2,548,020.37 Funds 722,237.57 Real Estate Sold Under Cont ract ------503,441.42 Other Liabilities 27,181.12 Premiums (Net): Outstand­ ing or deferred, secured by Contingency Fund 500,000.00 P olicy Reserves ---- 1,199,470.06 Interest due and accrued and Surplus other admitted assets 317,791.34 1,675,010.71

Total ------$33,876,189.43 Total - $33,876,189.43 Company Growth Insurance Surplus and Dec. 31 in F orce Resources Contingency Funds 1919 $ 59,904,344 $ 6,988,179.88 $ 400,681.39 1924 107, 153,798 12,594,366.70 1,143,323.10 1929 183,312,161 22,529,713.09 1,661,11 5.37 1934 191,973, 147 31,167,556.84 2,056,849.01 1935 197,860,562 33,876,189.43 2,175,010.71 New Business (paid for) in 1935-$33,409,000-increase 11 % (Average all Companies estimated at 3%)

HIGHLIGHTS OF 1935 Insurance in Force increased - - $6,000,000 Assets increased - - • • • • $2,700,000 Surplus increased to · -- • • $2,176.000 Payments to Policyholders and Beneficiaries • -- • - -- $3,460,000 For Further Details Write for a Copy of Our 1935 Detailed Statement Alumni Day Program Announcem ent The Minnesota Alumni

VOLUME 35 MlNNEAPOLfS, MlNNESOTA, MAY 2, 1936

Alumni Will Visit University on June 15 OOTBALL game are by no mean Durina the afternoon following the Fthe only event that attract al umni Commencement cIa luncheon'" the guests will have back to the campus of the niver ity an opportunity to visit the new cam­ of Minne ota. Each June everal ORE than 1,500 seni(ns will pus building and to renew old enter the alumni ranks 011 hundred graduate and former tu­ M campu friendship wit h faculty June 15 when they receive their dent visit the University to attend diplomas from President Coffman member and cla mate. It is po - and to enjoy the annual Alumni Day during the annual Commence­ ible too that other afternoon fea­ program. This year the date i Mon­ ment ezercises in Memorial Sta­ tures will be arranged by the Alumni day June 15, which of cour e is also dium. And on that same day Dar committee and these will be an­ the date of the Commencement exer­ several hundred graduates of ci e in Memorial tadium. former years will return t9 the nounced later through the Alumni camlYUS to attend the varia u.s Weekly and in clas letters. The Minne ota alumni reunion class reunions and the annual program operates on the five-year At the dinner ilver trophies will Alumni Dinner in the Minnesota be awarded to the member of the sy tern. Thi means that each cla Union in the evening. hold a reunion every five year , and ommencement Day is also oldest clas pre ent ... to the class so this June member of the clas of Alumni Day and the alumni p70- boa ting the greate_t numerical at­ 1931 will return to the campu for grant for the occa.sion is being tendance . . . to the clas with the their fir t quinquennial reunion. The arranged by a committee of the greatest proportional attendance ... variou five-year group from the class of 1911 he-llded by Ben and to the alumnu who ha travelled Palmer, p70mirtent Minneapolis the greatest di tance to be present at clus of 1876 to the cla of 1931 will attorney. hold luncheons in the Union or in the event. This latter award usual!\' The Commencement season on goes to omeone from ew England Pioneer Hall on Monday, June 15. the campus includes the fol/ow­ or California although last year a Then at 5 :30 o'clock the members of ing events: Cap and GOW1l Day. all clu~ e will gather in the main l!fay 14 .... Baccalaureate erl.'­ graduate wa present from Singapore. ballroom of the Minne ota Union ices, Torth rop Memorial audi­ And you can't get much farther away for the annual Alumni Dinner. To torium, Sunday, June 14: at 11 than that. o'clock .... Alumni Day, June thi event all alumni are invited A pecial block of eat will be whether members of the five - year 15, with class luncheons at noon and Alumni Dinner at 5:30 reserved in Iemorial tadium for cla e or not. 0' clock in !Jfinnesota Union. . . . the guests who desire to attend the It is traditional that the members Commencement Exerci.ses. llJe­ Commencement program follO\\'"ing of the twenty-five- ear or ilver An­ morial tadium, June 15 at eight the Alumni Dinner. The colorful ni ersary cIa be in charge of the o'clock. Commencement exerci es in recent arrang ments [or the dinner and the years have attracted as many as 20.- general program for the dar. 000 per ons. large tage is built committee from the las of 1911 wa named , everal on the east end of the football field and the audience week ago and is now at work on plan for the sit in the bowl of the stadium. o casion. Ben Palmer, well-known Minneapolis at­ nother traditional event of the Alumni Day program torney, i chairman of the 1911 committee and he will is a luncheon ill the iinnesota Union at which the mem­ erv . a toa tma ter at the lumni Dinner. bers of the lumni Advisorv Board meet with the Board The complete after-dinner program ha not yet heen of Regents and the administratiye official of the Univer­ annollnc d but it can be divlllcred that there will be no sity. On the Advi ory Board are graduates from every lengthy peeche- and even the "few brief remark" will county in the state. Orren E. afford '10L, pre ident of be brief. In addition to the speaking section of the pro­ the General Alumni Association, will pre-ide at the gram which ,ill include a personal me age of wel­ luncheon and President Coffman , ill be the speaker. come from Pre ident 1. D. Cofrman there will be For the benefit of alumni who haye never returned to mu ieal number and other features. The tables " ill be the campu for the lumni Day actin tie and who e idea so arranged that the gu t may be seated in cla s group. of reunion may have been gleaned from satiric article Becall e of thi an'ang ment it i essential that re erya- on uch oeca-ion , it may be aid that Iinnesota reuner tions for th dinner hould bent t lumni ecretar do not find it !leces ary to parade about the campu- and E. B. Pier e at least a w k in advance of the occasion. The pri e p r plale for th dinner i only eventy-fiy surrounding area in fanta Lic attire. The circu~ dL­ cent . re rvation blank , ill he found on another pia ' which critic ometime describe as a part of page of thi announccm nt and you m<1 make our alumni reunion activiti - will be entirely uri ing. And r s r ati n noll'. check rna b s nt with th order there will be no appeal for funds. Minnesota graduates or pa ment an be mad in the Union on the e ening of are invited to return to the campus for the plea ure and the dinner. enjo ment that the visit will bring.

Published by lhe General IUlllni Association of the Universit\' of Minn""ota. Wilham S. Gib' on. Edit~r. I ssu~d on Saturday of each week during the regular session, from September to June, and monthly during July and Augtlst. Entered as second elnss matter at the post office at Minneapolis, Minnesota. 1

Classes Will Hold Reunion Luncheons CLA S committee of the variou Taylor, Walter J. Trogner. Frank P. group, will b notified of the plan quinquennial or five-year cIa - Vroman, Arthur T. dam, Hugh . for their reunions by the committee e are making plan for the reunion Mer er, Dr. Mo e Barr nand eil in charge of the arranaement for lun heons of their group on . King ley. the aIT air . t> lumni Day, June 15. The lunch­ The member of the cla of 1877 One of the most a tive of all cIa eon will be held in private dining hold a reunion dinn r of their own organization i that of the thirty­ room in the Minne ota Union and in every year and thi group i alway ear group, the cIa of 1906. Fi~ Pioneer Hall new re idence for men. repr ented at th lumni Dinner in year ago at their la t quinquennial The ilver anniver ary cia each the Union. reunion this ir degree 45 year ago the la s omin June under the dire tion of neapoli. The member of the of 1891, also have a ommittee which the ommitte hairman. B 0 Palmer. lumni Day and reunion committee i making arrangement for a re­ Wendell Burn ha be n nam d are as f 0110\ : union of the group on June 15. The chairman of the committee of the Henry V. Bruchholz, Mabel Gron­ committee i haded by Byron H. cIa of 1916 which will make the dahl, Mr . William F. Olsen (Annie Timberlake of Minn apoli . reunion lun heon plan. The om­ Fay Kramer), Mrs. Lorna Lange mittee hairman of th fifteen " ar The member of the cia 5 of 1896 Mittelstadt, Mr. Claus . Rollin gr up, the cIa of 1921 i n;old will celebrate the fortieth anniversary (Agnes M. Lingren), Benjamin W. of Minneapoli ' . of their graduation in June. harle o Palmer, Mrs. Clarence M. Ba ford Among the prize awarded at the (Clara hepley). Mr. Thoma . F. Keyes of Minn apoli i chairman of the cla omrnillee. Mr. Keye is annual Alumni Dinner are ones for Peppard (Frances E. hrader), Mr . the cIa e with th large t propor­ Edward . Fergu on (May ldyth a former pre ident of the General Alumni A ' ociation and i now a tional attendan and the larrre t Thomp on), Mr . Henry V. Bruch­ nwnerical atl ndance. One of "the holz (Elizabeth R. Ware), Ros oe C. honorary member of the Board of Directors of the organization. older das group" will probably Webb. Mr. Clarence O. Maland carry away the proportional honor­ Large delegation from the cIa (Magdalene Holter), Ingwald Kvit­ and th tweot -five ear cIa s will be of 1901 have been pre en t at the five­ rud, Martin . Larson, Mrs. Maude a 1 ading andidate for the numerical year reunion of the group in the Rice Wright, Harold . Falk, Edwin award becaus of the intere t of the past and it i expected that this cla A. Hobb , Ebin 1. Melin, Curtis H. la in this 1936 reunion. Pomeroy, Benjamin M. Rigler, Mr . will be a tiv in the program of It i quite likel however that the Frederi k H. Luhman (Mabel O. Alumni Day thi year. The members 1911 group , ill be pre _ d in thi and ), George A. hain, Harold R. of thi cIa ,a of the other cIa matter by the las of 1926. The ten-year group of cour e i a large one and a larrre attendance i being Mr. E. B. Pierce, lumni e r tary ourrht by the committee headed b, Admini tration Building, Univer ity of Minne ota Clarence Tormo n, Duluth attorney. Minneapolis Th member of this cIa _ will re­ Dear Mr. Pierce: I am planning to be pre ent at th annual lumni turn to th niver ity to find a campu which ha been altered on­ Dinner in the Minn sota Union on J un 15. Please reser e sid rable sin e their days in school...... plates for me at eventy-five cents per plat nd, a a matter of fa t even tho ~e Check enclosed 0 who will b clebrating their fin't Will pay at dinner 0 quinquennial reunion, the members of the las of 1931, will find that ame ...... ···. ___ ····.··· CIa s ...... many new buildings have been added to th campu cene ince til time of Address ...... their graduation and ther ,ill be City ...... _...... _...... State ...... oth r chang to attract their in­ tere t. 3

work of contemporary American painter. The Changing Campus Scene Minne ota' physical plant !D- clude more than fifty building and T a half-r-entury aO'o when the tudenls and i being copied by sev­ an ever expanding campu area. J members of the cla s of 1936 re­ eral other American univer itie . Even the members of the class of cei ved their diploma, the Univer- Alumni who return to the campus 1931 who will return for their first ity of Minne ota wa a struggling on Alumni Day on June 15 will ee quinquennial reunion on June 15 young chool on the we tern border. the new adult education building will find that ilie erection of new . . . Thic; pa t year Minne ota wa under proce of con truction on the building coupled with the landscap­ Ii ted among the twelve greatest uni­ old parade ground. It will be a cen­ ing program ha brought many versitie of the country. On the ter of po. t-graduate activity and the change to the campu of their un­ faculty are scores of di tingui bed development of thi new division at dergraduate days. teacher who are among the fore­ Linne ota mark a ignificant for­ The athletic plant to which has mo t authoritie' in their field of ward tep in the omewhat hazy field learning and to their department been added in the past two years the of adult education. The tentative indoor sport building with its ad­ come graduate tudent from all parts program of the new department has of the world .... Fifty years ago the mini trative offices, gymnasium, class been outlined in the Alumni Weeklr. room and swimming pool is one of admini, trative official looked to the Educational foundation and agen­ Ea t for new recruit for the Min­ the fine t in ilie country. The de­ cies of the federal goyernment have partment of phy ical education and nesota teaching talI. Today the great recognized Minne_ota's aggre siye­ chool' of the East are coming to athletic reaches all male tudents ne in the field of re earch and have i\Iinne-ota for men. Tbi is a tribute through it comprehensiye program granted funds to be u ed in the con­ to the place that ::\Iinnesota holds in of intramural port and intercol­ tinuation of variou tudie being legiate competition .... Ju_t a month the educational world but it is a conducted by faculty member .... tribute "hich exact a toll for each ago the Regents adopted an athletic The development of the cultural life endowment plan which will in ure year linne. ota 10 e noted profes­ in the campu community i note­ . or and promic;ing young instruc­ the continuation of the full program worthy. oruuop lemorial audi­ tor to other in titulions. of ph ical education for men even torium is the home of one of mer­ hould the gate receipt- from aililetic Minne ota under the brilliant and ica's greate t mu ical organizations, conte ts at _orne future time fall to courageou leadership of Pre ident the Minneapolis ymphony orche­ a low level. olTman i the home of new and tra. This pa t winter pecial week­ progre ive idea in the field of day student concerts were pre ented These and other feature- of the higher education. There is not space in addition to ilie regular evening changing campu _cene will hold the to xpand upon all the e develop­ series and the unday afternoon interest of the graduate who return ment here but two may be men­ popular concert. loin orthrop to the campu for the annual Alumni tioned .... Four year ago Ulere was auditorium is the Little rt Gallery Day reunion and other activitie- on e tablished at Minne ota a new and to which tudent. may go to view the June 15. unique type of educational unit termed Ule General College. It wa­ planned in respon e to the tatistic which how that a large percentage of entering fre hmen remain in col­ lege for lwoear or less. The que tion were rai ed: 'Wh' not develop a cour e which will me t the need of thi large group of young men and women? hy re­ quire them to take a malLering of the traditional elementar courses leading to academic and profe' sional degree when tlJey will not continue with the advlln ed work in the vllriou department? Why not of­ fer a "ell-rounded and diver jfied two-year cour e which will give the e tudent an over-all view of the bo ic cience and ule humanities ... , hich will whet their intellectual ap­ petit ... and which \ ill train them for well-informed citizenship? The unit known as the General Co llege wa the answer. It now Illr an nrollment of over a thou and Old r'ielO Looking Aero s Parade /0 . Irrtl o r ~ · 4 UNl V en , ,.

'llie Golden Gophers of The University of Minnesota

. -- . Victory Years .. ~ ~

A 50 -Yard Line View of Minnesota Football

What do you know about the Gophers who are now in training for the 1936 season? Meet them in the booklet THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. It includes pictures of all the lettermen, a preview of the 1936 campaign, and other information about players and coaches that will be of interest to every alumnus interested in the game and in the activities of the Gophers. It has been hailed by sports writers and by alumni for its completeness in picturing 50 years of Minnesota football. The activities of the teams of 1933, 1934 and 1935 are featured. The book of 64 pages, 8Yl xll, contains more than 20,000 words and 90 pictures of players and scenes. It includes the records of all Minnesota football teams from 1886 through 1935. Every alumnus will prize a copy of this souvenir booklet. One Dollar. General Alumni Association lI8 Administration Bldg. University of Minnesota Minneapolis. The Story of Champions S long as football is played the record of Minne- This is my order for one copy of the souvenir A sota teams of the past three seasons will stond as booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. Bill me for one dollar when the book is mailed. one of the most brilliant achievements in the history of the popular American intercollegiate sport. This N arne ______-- ______record is compiled in print and pictures in the souvenir booklet, THE GOLDEN GOPHERS. The order blank at the left is for your convenience in Address ordering your copy. Enclose the one dollar if you desire. Ci ty ______Otherwise you will be billed when the book is mailed.