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12-1942

The Utah State Alumni Quarterly, Vol. 20 No. 2, December 1942

Utah State University

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Recommended Citation Utah State University, "The Utah State Alumni Quarterly, Vol. 20 No. 2, December 1942" (1942). Utah State Magazine. 91. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/utahstatemagazine/91

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Select Five - Vote Immediately 1. Watlace 0. Bickmore, who took a master's degree from 9. Ernest 0. Lar son, '18, is constr ucti on engineer on the the College in 1938, is superintendent of the Emery $16,000,000 Provo River project. He has been in the County school district at Huntington, Utah. He was employ of the Bureau of Reclamation for nineteen reared in Paradise, Utah, graduated from the South years during which time he has been in charge of the Cache high school at Hyrum, and from the College . H e investigation and planning of numerous Utah reclama­ has also done graduate work at the University of Cali­ tion projects, including the present responsibility . He fornia. Mr . Bickmore began his teaching career at also serves as the government's contacting representa­ Green River, where he served first as the high school tive with water us ers associations on completed recla­ coach and then as the high school princjpal. After mation projects and is active in state and federal work twelve yea rs there, he accepted his present position. lead ing to the deve lopment of the state's land and water 2. S. Robert Bjorkman, '23, nominee now residing in Pres­ resources. Mr. Lar son served as part-time instructor ton, Idaho, where he_is superintendent of schools, came at the College between 1918 and 1923, when he was to the USAC in 1918 when inducted int o the Students granted a master's degree . He is married and has two Army training corps at Logan. He served as battalion children , one of whom, Dick, attended the USAC from adjutant in 1921-22. He began his teaching career on 1939 to 1941. the North Sevier high school faculty in 1923 and ha s 10. torm McDonald , '16, is the owner and manager of a served in Idaho's public schools since 1924. He ha s large dairy farm and the Heber Motor Company in taught at Burley and was superintendent at Sugar City Heber City. After graduation from the College, Mr . for eleven yea rs. He was also president of 6th district McDonald taught school approximately 20 years in the Idaho Education Association in 1939-40. He has a mas ­ Wasatch, Tooele, and Bingham high schools . He is past ter's degree from the University of Idaho and has done president of the Heb er Lions Club and ha s served as post-graduate work at Stanford. He is married and Wasatch County repr esentative for the Utah Legisla­ has three children. ture in 1941. 3. William J. Bond, '17, is superintendent of schools at the 11. William P. Miller , '36, present superintendent of schools Duchesne County school district and has been ther e in the Web er school district, taught school in Davis since 1937, when he transferred from a similar position County from 1929 to 1935, served as chief probation in Wasatch County . Beginning his teaching career at officer, juvenile court , second judicial district, from Jan ­ Richmond, Mr . Bond also has taught at Coalville and uar y to June of 1935, and as coordinator for the Weber Heber City. He is married and has four children. Allen , school district from 1935 to 1937, when he was mad e the oldest, is a senior attending the USAC. assistant superintendent for the same district. He has 4. Lucile Roger s Chambers, '19, student body vice presi­ also served for a brief period as business manager of dent back in 1918-19, is now living in Ogden . She the Utah Tuberculosis Sanatorium. Mr. Miller is mar­ taught, after graduation, at American Fork, Devil's ried and ha s four daught ers. He was granted his M.S. Slide and in Ogden. Married Alma D. Chambers . Mrs. degree in education at the University of Utah last Chambers was very active as a student in extra-curric­ spring . ular affairs, and besides serv ing as st udent body execu­ tive, was a member of the Pan Hellenic Council, Alpha 12. Leslie Nelson, '30, is vocational agricultural teacher at · igma Nu, Sigma Theta Phi, and the Book Lovers Club. Box Elder high school at Brigham, a position he ac­ 5. Alfred Rus se ll Croft, '20, editor of Student Life in 1920, cepted after he had served in a similar position for six is now conservationist at the Int er- Mountain For est years at Cyrus high school. In 1940 Mr. Nelson at­ and Range Experiment Station in Ogden, where he ha s tend ed the Ohio State Universit y on a fellowship, where spent most of his time since graduation. Mr. Croft, h e did graduate work in the field of agricultural edu­ very active in college student affairs from 1915 to 1920, cation guidance and general education. He has been is married and ha s four children. He taught school at made vice-prinicipa l of the Box Elder school, in addi­ the old Murdo ck Academy at Beaver, Montpelier high tion to his regular t eaching duti s. While att ending th e school, Idaho, Ogden high school and Weber college, and College, he participated in athletics, debating , dra ­ has done graduate wor k at the USAC and Cornell. A matics, and Ag Club activities. He was awarded an "Be-No," Alpha Sigma Nu, and Pi Zeta Pi (now Pi M.S. degree from the USAC in 1931. Kappa Alpha), and a private of the first world war. 13. Junius F. Ogden, '13, is a prominent agriculturalist 6. Frank G. Fister, '38, a second generation Aggie (son living at Richfi eld, who has held and is holding several of Dr. George M. Fist er, '13) and one of Utah State's civic and church positions . At present, he is bishop of greatest cheer leaders , is personnel assistant in th e the Richfield First Ward , and secretary-treasurer of a Industrial Relations department wit h Columbia Steel reservoir and an irrigation company. Mr. Ogden has Company, in the defense plant division, where he trans­ his own farm. In the past he has taught school for ferred in September from the civilian personnel office ten years in the Richfield high school; served a three­ at Hill Fi eld. Frank w ill be remembered as one of th e year mission. He has also been active in the Richfield "campus big-shots" during his collegiate career. and Sevier County farm bureau organizations. 7. Milton F. Hartvigsen, '30, principal of the Grace high 14. Phyllis Kirkham Owen. '33, was one of the "honor" school at Grace, Idaho, this year is serving as president g rads of 1933, her list of activities including : president of the Fifth District Idaho Education Association and of A.W.S., sophmore class, and Sorosis sorority (now also as president of the Fifth District Idaho Athletic Alpha Chi Omega) . She was a member of Spurs, Beaux Association, in addition to being bishop's counselor in Art, Empyrean and Buzzer staff and upon graduation his ward. Mr. Hartvigsen received a master of educa­ was awarded a scholarshio to th e Merrill-Palmer School tion degree from the USAC in 1939. He is married at Detroit, Michigan . Mrs. Owen taught home eco­ (Virgil Burrup, ex-Aggie) and ha s three children. nomics at the Box Elder high school and later marri ed LeRoy W. Hillam, '16, father of two Aggie grads, Ezra B. Owen of Brigham City. At the present time she Duane in 1940 and Bruce in 1941, is vocational agricul­ is serving as receptionist in the administration build­ tural instructor at Granite high school in Salt Lake ing of the Bushnell General Hospital at Brigham. City. Mr . Hillam has been interested in agriculture ever 15. Elden Torbensen, '33, is music instructor at the Downe y since he graduated with a major in animal husbandr y. high school in Idaho, previous to which he served in He was with the Bureau of Animal Husbandry , U .S. the same cap.acity at the Star Valley high school at D.A., in 1917-18, county agent at Amarillo, Texas, the Afton, Wyommg. He has graduate wor k to his credit following year and in 1920 returned to Utah where a at the USAC and at the University of Idaho where he short time later he accepted his present position. A received hi s mast1;r's degree this past suir:mer. Mr. third member of th e Hillam family, Shirley, is a student Torbensen was active as a student on th e campus tak- at the College. ing a spec ial interest in music. ' Page 2 THE UTAH STATE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Publi shed quarterly by th e Utah State A gricultural College Alu mni A ssociation. Alumni N otes Entered as seco nd -class matter at the post office in Loga n, Uta h, under th e act of By Marc h 3, 1897 . THE SECRET ARY Vol. XX DECEMBER, 1942 No.2 e DEB YOUNG One of the most popular announce­ Leonard W. McDonald, '39, Managing Editor ments E. L. Romney has yet been allowed to make by his superiors, is that Deb Young, '31, will coach basket­ ball this coming season. Deb isn't too well versed in the five-man sport and no one knows that better than himself. He is, however, not afraid to take over the new assignment and give it his DECEMBER CONTENTS best. In return, he'll get the support of the team, of the student body and The President's Corner ...... Page 4 the USAC Alumni 100%. Good luck, Deb. Sometimes you can - Editori al by D . A . Skeen , '09 - go a long way with the right spirit.

With the Class of '64 ...... Page 4 e ALUMNI ASSOCIATION TAKES STEPS - Recent Arri vals- Upon the request of Alumni Of­ ficers, the USAC Board of Trustees Harold L. Hiner Wins Navy Cross ...... Page 5 has appointed an Alumni Committee of the Board composed of Hyrum Blackhurst, of Salt Lake City, chair­ Aggies in the Armed Forces ...... Pages 5, 10, 11, 12 man; Theodore L. Holman, of Salt Lake City; and Ray E. Dillman, of Roosevelt . This has given the Associ­ Children of Utah State Alumni ...... Page 6 ation a more direct contact with the Board than has hitherto been enjoyed, and will make of the Alumni Associa­ Marriages ...... Page 7 tion a full-fledged partner with the College administration in furthering the interests of the institut.ion. The Score Board ...... Page 7 HATS OFF TO D. A. SKEEN - A ggie Sport s- e For his quick grasp of alumni prob ­ lems, on the campus and off, for his On the Campus ...... Page 8 time devoted to alumni and college work at a personal sacrifice to him­ self, it's hats off to President Skeen. With the Faculty ...... Page 9 He has exhibited an indepedence of judgment, a sympathetic broad-mind­ edness that at once places him in the Alumni on Foreign Duty ...... Page 13 front-line of college supporters. The Alumni Association needs such officers and men . What the Alumni are Doing ...... Pages 14, 15, 16, 17 e DUES DRIVE GETS BETTER EVERY YEAR The 1942-43 alumni dues drive now on gives promise of surpassing all past records. All the paid-up members of last year are sending in their checks, OFFICERS OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION - 1942-43 judging from those coming in, plus a great number of new members. D . A. Skeen, '09 Pre sident Every alumnus should contribute at Leonard W. McDonald, '39 Executive Secr eta ry least a dollar, and all that can should send in a Life Membership. The mat­ ter of finance is one of the chief wor ­ Executive Committee ries and weaknesses of the Associa­ D. A. Skeen, '09 Evan B. Murray , '27 Sherma n P . Lloyd, '3 5 tion. A one-dollar bill from all our Thelma Fogelberg , '29 W . W . Christensen, '23 alumni would take us out of bondage! L. R. Humph erys, '12 (Ex-Officio) Leonard W . McDonald, '39, Execu tive Secretary • First of a series of regional Alumni gatherings was held in Provo, Thurs­ day evening, December 10. President Alumni Council Members E . G. Peterson, Director R. H. Walker, and Dean N. A. Pedersen attended and D . A. Skeen , '09 Roy Halver son, '25 John Bankh ead, '97 gave very interesting talks. Erne st R. Lee, '2 7 H . R. Ad ams, '09 Sherman P. Lloyd, '35 Alumnus J . W. Thornton, of Provo, Dr . George R . Hill, '08 Th elma Fogelberg, '29 Johanna Moen, '20 was in charge of the affair, assisted Lucille Ow ens Petty, '26 L. Burt on Redd , '36 Evan B. Murr ay, '27 by Seth T. Shaw and Mrs. Gwendolyn Charles D . Kappl e, '17 Glen W ort hin gton, '29 M ary Ben nett Smith, '28 Johnson Warner. W . W. Christensen, '23 Alumni attending the dinner-meet­ L. R. Humph erys, '12 (Ex-Officio) ing reported that they had a very en­ Asa Bullen, ' l O (Ex-Officio) jo yable time.

Page 3 The President's Corner With the Class of '64 Announcements of Recen t Arrivals alumnus has fe lt the inspiration and the urge to carry back to his commu­ nity a service in this sense. The Col­ DA GHTERS TO : D. A. Skeen lege desires, of course, to make the Ja y Rulon Bingham, '41, and Lyal most of every opportunity to keep Stanton Bingham, ex-Aggie-July USAC alive and make effect ive this inspira­ 23, Kamas, Utah. Alumn i tion and urge. The college man fought Nina Richards Ballard, '41, and Nolan in all contests for his college ideals . R. Ballard - October, Smithfield, Chief The soldier today fights for the Amer­ Utah. ican ideals and t he American way of Dean R. Purri ng ton, '40, and E lzada life, and before him at all times are Car lson Purrington, '40-Septem­ kept the duty and opportunity to pro­ ber 4, Watertown , South Dakota. mote and defend these American Frederick G. Eberhard, '38, and Phyllis The College and the Alumni ideals. Thorley Eberhard, '39- July, alt Lake One of the greatest appeals ever City, tah. } T is, of course, impossible to have made to the United States Supreme Am) ' Louise Knowl es Farrer, '40, and /Pelis a College Alumni Associat ion with­ Court was made by Daniel Webster as Farrer- July, Rant oul, Illinois. out a college . Experience seems to an alumnus of Dartmouth, in the La Var Owens, '38, and Bertha Brus h­ suggest that for an uncertain time a famous Dartmouth College case. He September 10, Logan, Utah. college may exist without an alumni said, in defense of the very life of his LaPriel Myers Poulson, '31, and Gart h association. But will such a college Alma Mater, "I have brought my Alma T. Poulson - September 10, Salt Mater to this presence, that, if She Lake City, Utah. grow in size and influence and in ser­ Ir el Lewis Longhurst, '35, and Ada vice to justify its existence and obtain must fall, She ma y fall in her robes and with dignity." McKinnon Longhurst - August, its deserved support from the sources Ephraim, Utah. of its creation, if, when its graduates Recently, President Hutch ins of the Melvin M. Ha ll, '36, and Geneva Cook go out into the various wa lks of life, University of Chicago said, "The func­ Hall-May, Sa lt Lake City, Utah. there is no immediate contact with the tion of a college is genera l education; Isabel Finlin son William s, '40, and college and no immediate personal in­ that education which every citizen Rymal G. Williams-June, Cedar terest shown by the college in the ex­ shou ld have, as a citizen, in proportion City, Utah. perience, the problems, the progress , to his capacity to receive it." The Col­ DeWitt Grandy, '39, and Edra Munns and finally the achievements of the lege holds this opportunity for every Grandy-June, Vernal, Utah. citizen in the state . It can present this graduates? Edith Doutre napµ , '39, and Nathan ]. opport unit y through its Alumni Asso­ Snapp, '40 - October 10, Green.belt, The progress and achievements of ciation as a part of its service . A well­ Maryland . the graduates of the Utah State Agri­ informed Alumni Association, kept up Ralph Johnston Hervey, '40, and Grace cultura l College are many and note­ to date by the College, is its most M. Maurer Hervey - May, Berk­ worthy. The College is interested in effective appeal to the student -citizen eley, California. its noble sons and daughters who have of every community; and forms his Lula Udell Rogers, '38, and Walter gone out from the College, not alone greatest inspiration to look forward Glen Rogers-May, Eager, Ariz. for selfish gains, but to carry out the and to struggle for that education Hettie Leatham Hickman , '38, and J . fine ideals and inspirations implanted which has been provided as his right B. Hickman, ex-Aggie-Ju ly, San and his duty. Luis Obispo, California. during College da ys; and to improve Samuel Wayne Smith, '36, and Leota upon them in service to the state and The impa ct of war in all of its as ­ Thomas, ex-Aggie-Ju ly, Loa, Ut . nation. pects upon education and educational Day! J. Webb, '38, and Wilma Barth ­ Man y of these fine sons and daugh­ institutions is tremendous . The num ­ lome Webb-July, Kamas, Utah. ters were recruited from remote places ber of private and endowed institu­ Laren D. Morrill, '36, and Lila Groman in the state and surrounding states tions that have had to close up is as­ Morri ll - September, Cheyenne where the opportunities at the Utah ton ishing . Curtailment and direction Wells, Colorado . State Agricultural College were made of all educational activities toward Glen Lyle Hudson, '37, and Ima P. known to them more by chance than furthering the war effort is proper and Young-June, Council, Idaho. should be recognized as a necessary Jeanette Ford McBride, '36, and Max by plan . The return to the Alma service, and support should be gauged McBride-Ju ly, Oakland, Cal if. Mater, and the continued interest of accordingly . Doug las W. Hendr icks, '41, and Barb ­ such graduat!!S has been by chan ce; ara Larsen - October, Richmond, and but for the organization of these While all such institutions are being Utah. graduates into a group such as the called upon to justify their existence Ruth Dawson Affleck, '41, and Doyle P. Alumni Association, they would be lost and public support by the service they Affleck , '27- "eptemb er, Logan., Utah. to th e College progress from year to render, it is hoped by the Alumni As­ Beth Lowe Stauff er, '37, and Delmar Bail ey year. sociation of the Utah State Agricul­ tauff er, '39-A ugust, IP'illcox, Arizona. tural College that an effect ive pla n of Earl R. Christensen, '39, and Allis The scope of the College se rvic e is cooperation with th e College can be Crittenden Christensen, '39-June, not genera lly known. The trend to­ further worked out, and that full and Sa lt Lake City, Utah . ward specia lizati on has been great . complete support will be given by Anna Beth Reeder-Bishop, '38, and A. The results of this specialization have both, to a conti nu ed program of ser­ Alvin Bishop, '34-November, Lo­ been far-reaching and important, par­ vice by the College that will merit full gan, Utah. ticularly to every graduate . The re­ support by the state, and a full realiz­ Haro ld 0. Johnson , '39, and Lucil e sults of specialized work in every de­ ation of the service idea ls embodied in Short-Johnson - October, Burley, partment are of vast importance to its creation and devel opme nt. Idaho . the cit izens of the state. Scientific Let us hope that every alumnus can SONS TO: knowledge is valuable onl y as applied be informed so that he can boost the *Margaret Ririe Tripp, '36, and Lyle to the problems of dail y life and their Utah State Agricu ltural College, as it Tripp, '36-September 5, La Jolla, solution. is rendering service today, rather than California. The Alum ni Association shou ld be as he knew it when he finished and *We ar e indebt ed to Lyl e and fargaret for the agency of the College through went away, from one to fifty years the 111· w titl e of thi departm ent. wh ich this is done as a service . Every ago. (Continu.ed nn page 18)

Pag e 4 Harold L. Hiner Wins Navy Cross

Chase Nielsen, Missing, Awarded Distinguished Flying Cross

At leas t two Utah State Agricu l­ tura l College a lumni have already won, in the pr ese nt war , deco ration s which will keep their nam es high on the honor rol l of the United State . Lieutenant Haro ld L. Hiner , '4 1, stu­ dent body pr esident at the College in 1940 -4 1, has been decorated for brav­ ery whi le servin g aboard the " one­ shi p fleet" crui ser Boise. Second Aggie is Chase J. l ielsen, who attended the College for thre e years and then en listed in the army air corp in 1939. He was a memb er of the famou s Tokyo raid led in April by Brigadier Genera l Jam es H . Harold Hiner, '41 Chase J. Nielsen, ex-Aggie Doolittl e. In October he was officiall y Former Student Body President , Missing after Toyko raid, is believed to announced as mi ssing on that raid Decorat ed by Navy Officials be held prisoner. and a distin guished Aying cross was awarded on his beha lf to hi s wife , Thora Ricks ielsen. He had the dis­ tinction of being the only Utahn to Aggies in the Armed Forces participate in the foray . Parents of Lieutenant Nielsen are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Nielsen of Hyrum. First Lieutenant Hiner, a member of 1927-34 1935 th e U . S. Marine Corps, was aboard Major Golden P. Wright, '27, for~er Brice 0. Anderson graduated recent­ the cruiser Boise when she encoun­ ly from officer training school at Fort tered a "fleet" of six Japanese war­ principal of th e Millard County high school at Fillmore, Utah, is now ad­ Sill, Oklahoma, and has been commis­ ships, and outnumbered and outgun­ sioned a second lieutenant. ned, was instrumental in sinking the jutant of the Salt Lake army air base. .tle was called to active duty July 1, William W. Reeder, while studying h'alf dozen Jap vesse ls. at Cornell University on his doctorate Among the messages of praise that 1941, as a captain . After attending the adjutant's general school at Wash­ degree in socio logy, was called into the reached Hiner's parents, Mr. and Mrs. army where he has now been commis­ Lyle Hiner, of Pocatello, Idaho, was ington, D. C., he was assigned to Gowen Field , near Boise, Idaho; to sioned a second lieutenant after spe­ one from the Governor of that state, cial officers training. He has been sta­ expressing Idaho's pride in their son. Pendleton Field, Oregon; and then to the Salt Lake army air base. tioned temporarily at Fort George After graduation from the College Meade, Maryland. in 1941, Haro ld was one of 40 men se­ Captain Frank A. Christen son, '28, lected in the nation to excbange · re­ former student body president at the 1936 serve commissions for an active com­ College, has entered the army air force Karl G. Alder returned from an mission in the marine corps. He joined and is stationed at the army base hos­ L. D.S. mission in June and entered that organization in September of last pita l at Bowman Field , Louisiana. the U.S. army in September. He is year, and lat er saw action in the Solo­ Myron M. Layton, '30, former ath­ stationed at Will Rogers Field, Okla­ mons . letic director at South Junior high homa. The Alumni Association and the Col­ school at Bountiful, was recently pro­ Loile J. Bailey, formerly employed lege are proud of the record these two moted to the rank of major in the U.S . by the U.S . department of agriculture, Alumni have made; proud, too, of army. Major Layton has been in the is now an ensign in the U.S. naval th e thousands of other alumni now in army about two years, and is now sta­ reserve . He married Anne Fugal, a the armed forces and the showing they tioned at San Francisco, California. BYU student, in May. are making. Everyone is serving as Kenneth W. Gillespie, '32, has been William H. Bennett has been sta­ best he can the call and interests of promoted to the rank of lieutenant tioned at Fort Douglas but was ex­ our country . colonel in the army at Fort Hamilton, pecting to be transferred from there. where he has been stationed since Prior to his induction on June 5 he March 1941. Prior to going to New was county agricultural agent in Car­ York , he was stationed at San Pedro, bon County. Notice at Fort MacArthur and before that he Rich L. Finlinson is attending of­ The USAC Alumni Office is was in Missoula, Montana. Col. Gil­ ficers training school at Camp Davis, preparing a Utah State A lumni lespie major ed in business at the Col­ N. C. He married Klee Berlin in Feb­ War Record, which will contain lege. ruary of last year. the names, rank and service Merrill B. Anderson, '34, has been Paul Lowe Geddes, Lt. (jg) U .S . record of each and every Aggie commissioned lieutenant , junior grade, naval reserve, is living in Maryland. alumnus. Please help us with in th e na vy and has been assigned the He is married and has a son two this task by sending in news position of assistant paymaster in the months old. He has completed his about Utah Staters in the ser­ na va l station at Oakland, California . LLB degree at Columbus Law School, vice. He ha s a master's degr ee from Har­ Washington, D. C. va rd. (r:nniinu ed on page 10)

Page 5 Sons and Daughters of Utah State Alumni

STEPHENW . HANSEN age twelve month . Son of C. Win ton Han ­ sen, '36, and Evelynne Ander son of Sa lt Lake City, Uta h.

CLARA BETH SMITH age three years, and

CAROLINE SMITH age six month . Dau ghters of Clyde F. Smit h, '35, and Crystle Keller, '36, of Ra­ leigh, orth Carolina.

ANN WEATHERSTON two yea rs and four month s. Dau ghter of Vern '\Veath erston , '38, and Ro e Morri on of Sa n F ranci co, Californ ia .

GARY LYNN JOHNSON aue five and one-half mont hs. Son of Geor ge Lynn John son, '38, and Joy Wilcox, U . of U. '40, of Lo An geles, California .

PATRICIA ALICE EVANS age four month s. Dau ghter of Robert J. Evan s, '34, and Alice Pu gmir e, '35, of Pu ll· man , 'Wash ingto n.

LINDA FRANCES DAVIS aue fourt een mon ths. Dau ghter of Mr. and Mrs . Clifton J. Da vis of Waimea , Kauai , T. H . Mr. Dav i grad uated in ]9 37.

Marc h Quarte rly : A specia l page in the Marc h Quar­ ter ly wi ll feature Agg ies of the "S econd Generation" -S ons and Daughters of graduates of past years, who ar e now attending the USAC.

Page 6 Spo rts by ,.__M_arr_ia g_es_ ___,, The Score Board LAR ON • J. Mark Holmes, '28, of Logan, to Mary Jarvis . Karine Wursten, '33, to David Hill. tural school, Colorado Agricu ltura l Margaret Egbert, '33, to Grover David College, Fort Collin , 25-0 score . Carpony . It was after their defeat from CAC Maurine Thomson, '33, to Harry H. Cloke. that the Aggies ·rea lly turned on the Maurine Peterson , '34, of Newton, to heat and got the big Blue and White Allan Langacre. grid machine to roll ing. Brigham Cyril McClellan, '35, to Betty Marie Young Un iver ity's home comin g was Starr. poi led by a 9-6 upset by the Farmers • Hermoine Tracy, '36, of Ogden, to Frank B. Jex. from Utah State . Iext week they held Marjorie Crookston , '37 of North Logan, to the highly touted Denver Pioneers to A rves L. Ch.rist en.sen. a 13-13 tie to kno ck them out of the Rubert Wayne Trib e, '.37, of Ogden , to l o· cha mpion ship honor and then they an.na Zampedri. wound up their sea on with an im­ Ram.on.a Hill, '37, to Clyde H. Gailey, '37. Eldo res Jorgensen, '37 to Christine Fields . pressive 14-6 win over Coach "B un­ Irving B. Moore, '37, to Naomi Wainwright. ny" Oakes' Wyoming eleven. Merlin B. Lund, '37, of Brigham City , to With only one day of pract ice, the Gayle Robinson of Stub en.ville, Ohio. reju venat ed Farmer s entrain ed for • Paul Frederick Christensen, '38 , to Marie Patricia Walsh . Wic hita University to tan gle with the Marie Johnson, '38, of Richmond, to Shocker in a "Turkey Day " fracas. Shir ley Rogers. Romney 's comp licated "T" was ju st Leonard C. Kearl, '38, to Dorothy Cow­ too much for the Wich ita lads to ley. Elma Tietjin, '38, to Gerald Vance figur e out and the Farmers emerged Fawkes. victoriou , 21-13. Keith Larson, '38, to Idella Borup . Deb Young, '3 I With the · mol eskin s tucked away Mary Peterson, '38, to Ir ving Wass er­ man . Takes over basketball at Utah State for the season and maybe for the Wendel R. Wilkin, '38, to Gerry Lust. durat ion, Aggie sport s mo ved to the Mary Hatch , '39, of Woods Cross, to fieldho u e, where basketba ll got un­ Boyd C. Jorgensen. Aggies Take Fourth Place der way on ovember 24, under the • George A. McClister, '39, to Mary Anne In Big Seven Conference direction of Coach Deb Young, newly Milano. Dee Nuhn , '39, to Elizabeth McGrady. By LY N LI\RSO , '43 appointed ca aba coach . Delilah Sim.rnons, '39, to Noel L eBerge, of Deseret News Sport s Correspond ent Although it is not expected that an. Francisco, California. the Big 7 game will be played a Charles P . .Olson., '39, of Logan, to Dorothy After tartin g out with a gree n and Westover. inexperien ced eleven last fa ll, Coach schedul ed due to the existin g war con­ Mar the, Francom., '40, of L evan, Utah., to E. L. (Dick) Romney and his char ges dit ions, an interesting pro gra m will Charles F. Broth erson. have come a lon g way since training be conducted. Ta lk of having the Edith Barton, '40, of Kays ville, Utah., to teams on the weste rn slope play and Th ell B. Carroll. camp opened and wound up in fourth Me rlin I. Bish.op, '40, to Jun e Adams . place in the conference standin g. decide a champion and then matching • Aldine Hatfield, '40, of Sandy, Utah , The Ags won every non-conferen ce thi team with the winner of the four to James 0 . Fox, '39. game and lost on ly three conference teams on the eas tern slope for the Oetta Baugh , '40, to Paul E. Hollands champion ship of the circuit seems to of Oakland, California . tilt s to end up a fairly successful sea­ Alda Kendricks, '40, to Ray Alden on. The two top teams of the Big 7, be gainin g among the league officials. Thatcher, '42. Utah and Colorado Universities , Coach Young has a whole host of Beulah Remund, '40, to Max William handed the Farmer their first two letter men back thi s year, and with Doutre of Santa Monica, Calif. Elaine Sorenson, '40, to John G. easo n defea ts by score of 34-14 and the add ition of severa l fr e hm en and Becker. 34-7 respective ly. Then two weeks ophomor e candid ates on the squad, • Walter Carlisle Barber, 40, to Katherine late r, they uffere d another set-back Uta h State 's chances look exceed ingly Marie Bregle r of San Francis co. at the hand s of their si ter agricu l- briaht for the 1942-43 seaso n. June An.drew Agren , '4 1, to H. K enneth Brown., '33. Preston. A. Affleck , '4 1, to Chlo Anderson , '37, of College Ward. 1942 G~ID CONFERENCE SUMMARY Veryle Allen , '4 1, lo Lothair Pedersen. Ruth Carol Brown., '4 1, to Ralph K. Mc· Team Lost Tied Utah State Oppon ents Score Cloy, '39, of Rup ert, Idaho. Colorado U 1 0 14 Colorado U 34 Boyd Iverson, '4 1, of Tr emonton, to Marion Frank. Utah U 1 0 7 Utah U 34 Mildr ed Clark ,' 4 1. to ] wiius McClellan ,'39. • Melba Gay J ensen, '41, to Sidney Denver U 2 1 0 Color ado St ate 25 McCann Pr iday, '42. Iris Kemp , '41, to Grant P. Rogers. Co lorado State 3 3 0 9 Brigham Young 6 Beth Merrill, '41, of Richmond , to Utah State 2 3 1 13 Denver U 13 Briton McConkie. William A. Low, '41, to Ruth Johnson. Wyoming 2 4 0 14 Wy omingU 6 Imogene Redd, '41, to Benjamin K. Hess. Brigh am Young 5 0 (Conti nued on page 18)

Page 7 Edit ed by In eda Hi ck m a n , '42 ON THE CAMPUS Sec l'eta l'y, A.A.A ., Ca m1)us

Student News Briefs Twent y Utah State seniors ha ve been selected for listing in the 1943 edition of Who 's Who in American Colleges and Univers iti es. * * * In add ition to choosing 25 new sponsors of fres hman and sophomore rank, ROTC officers advanced incum­ bents to high regimental and batta lion posts. Vera Griffin, '43, of Logan, was named regim ental sponsor. Assistant r egi mental s ar e Betty Hat ch, '43, of Woods Cross and Hel en Stewart, '43, of Brigham. * * * Dale Hutchins, '45, of Arca dia, Cali­ fornia, was named "Best Date at Uta h State" at the AW Preference Ball October 30. * * * Mor e than 250 of Utah State's mal e stud ents ar e enrolled in one of the bran ches of the enlisted reserve, ac­ cording to a recent survey made on the campu s by military officials. * * * Grant Cullimore, '43 Lane Palmer, '43 Fo llowing a period of st reamlined Seni or Cla ss Prexy Editor of Student Life rushin g under the direction of Burn s B. Crookston, '44, of Nort h Logan, men's panh ellenic president, and Phyl­ Senior Class Headed By Staff Appointments Filled lis St oddard , '4 3, of Richmond , wo­ men's Greek council head, five campus Basketball Star For Paper's 41st Year fraternities and four sororitie s pledged Headin g the Cla ss of '43 in their Staff appointment to tudent lif e, 107 and 83 new members, respective ly. la t year at Utah State is Grant Cul­ ca mpu s weekl y now enterin o-its 4 l st * * * Ra y Lutz , '45, of Logan, who is l imore of Garland , enior cla ss prexy. year as the co llege new pap er, we re sophomore class president, ha s been Assistin g him are Betty Hatch of released by Lan e Pa lm er , '43, of given, "in addition to his regular Woods Cross , vice-pre -ident , rep lac­ Tremonton , , ed itor-in -chief. H e and duties ," the task of official Chime in g Dori s VanDam , who fai led to re­ Geor ge Bull en, '44, of Lo ga n, who i Ringer in Main tower, replacing Clyde "Tud" Tarbet , who graduated wit h the turn to choo l; and Ruth Worlton of busines mana ge r.. were named to Class of '42. Lehi , sec retary. Ruth i a sister of their po t by the Pub lication s Coun­ * * * Madge Wor lton , '3 9, now Mr s. Ferri cil last sprin g. Ca mpu s -centered activitie s were Eva ns of Salt Lake Cit y. Grant ha s Hea din g the list is Gwen Hun aker , t ressed by st udent council officials when the student body bud get, re­ already acc limated him self to the '43 , of Hon eyv ill e, as as ociat e editor. leased by Aa ron Amach er, budget prob lem whi ch every senior execu­ Pa ge ed itors in cl ude Mar guer ite cha irman , '43 , of Logan, revealed in­ tive fa ces and gives evidence of mak­ Kropfli Byin gton , '43 , of Bancroft , creases in student social s and intra­ in g th is a banner year for his cla s . Idah o, feat ur e editor; tan Andersen, murals allotments and decrease s for intercolleg iate ath letics, lyceums and '43, of Tremonton , sport ed itor; and Buzzer. Elections Helen Stewart , '43, of Bri gham , and Youno-, of Lo gan , was chosen vic e­ In a specia l electio n held ear ly in Marian Car li le, '46, of Lo gan , soc i· pr esident ; He len Brun son , of Fill­ fa l I quarter , Emma Martin , '43, of ety co-editor s. Cald er Pi ckett, '44, of Pre ston , Idaho , was nam ed make-up mor e, sec retary ; and Ree e Al len, of Ogden , was elected to fill the po t of Tr emonton , cheer lead er. student body secre tary , succee din g and column editor; Max ine Bur ­ Unita Woodland Welch , who did not goy ne, '44, of Montpeli er, Id aho , and Con stan ce Blair , '43, of Lo gan , copy return to school. The Highest Form of A tie vo te in spr ing run-off s neces­ ed itor s; and Beth Wak ley '44, of sitat ed revoti ng for sec ret ary of the Lo gan , proof edit .or . Salesmanship is junior class. France s Montrose , '44 , Staff member , in cludin g new re­ of Lo gan , no sed out Chuc k Goodwin porter s, special wr iter , bu iness staff Good Service and office per sonn el, numb er 61. '44, of Idah o Fall , Idaho. Geor ge Lac ey, '43, stud ent body JOHN A. BINNS, '33 counc ilman , i sup erv isin g election Freshman Elections 12 West Center Phone 980 again thi s year , aft er runnin g off th e In what was considered a nea r­ LOGAN, UTAH 194 1-42 ballotin g without mi shap or record voting for fre hman cla elec­ critic ism. Lacey was one of the twenty tion s, the Clas of '43, in m id-Octob er Am eri can Nat ional• Insuranc e Co . senior s selected to be Ii ted in Who s ba ll otin g, T)amed Dan Ludlow. of Galve st on , Texas Who in Ameri can Coll eges . pani h Fork , pr esident. Ade ll e

Page 8 Faculty News Briefs WITH THE FACULTY Wilford D. Porter, '22, has been elected president of the American As­ sociation of Agricultural College Edi­ tors. He served on the association's Executive Council during the past year and his election came as a result of the high reputation he holds with fel­ low editors in the United States. * * * Laval S. Morris, '23, reported for duty with the army air forces basic training center at Camp Kearns, Utah, where he will be post land scape archi­ tectural officer. He has the rank of captain and was head of the landscape archit ecture department at the Col­ lege. * * * Bliss H. Cra ndall, '37, has returned to the campus as a member of the agronomy sta ff, replacing Delmar C. Tingey, '22, who has been appointed senior agronomist with the bureau of plant industry to do research work with rubber producing plants. Bliss received his master 's degree last June at Iowa State College. * * * Jack Croft, '24, dean of men at the College, in October was granted a Dr. King Hendricks, '23 Prof. L. Mark Neuberger,' 32 leave of absence for the duration to Heads College Salvage Committee Commissioned First Lieutenant; Reports to become superintendent of the quarter­ Camp Callan, Calif ., in December master warehouses at Ogden. Replac­ ing Croft for the remainder of the quarter, is Ira N. Hayward, '24, assist­ ant professor of English. COLLEGE SCRAP MET AL DRIVE SUCCESSFUL; * * * ALL CAMPUS DEPARTMENTS CONTRIBUTE J. Whitney Floyd, '36, College exten­ Working vigorous ly to ga ther a ll metal crap on the campu is Dr. Kin " sion forester, has been appointed a memb er of the state board of forestry Hendrick s, '23. associate profe or of Eng lish at the Coll ege and chairman of and fire control by Governor Herbert the Co llege Salvage committee. During the pa st two months Dr. Hendrick s B. Maw. assisted by his committee compo ed of Dean R. H. Wa lker of the school of * * * agriculture , Dean L. A. Stoddart of S. R. Stock, '22, lieutenant com­ mander, U.S.N .R., has returned to the the school of fore stry , Dean George USAC as commanding officer of the D. Clyde of the chool of engineer­ navy and marine training school on ing, and Harry S. Parker , uperin­ the campus. ::,::* * tendent of building and grounds , ha s Marvin Bell, '42, member of the scoured camp us building s from attic College coaching staff, resign ed in Oc­ to basement for di carded metal. tober to join the U.S. navy physical fitness program. First pha se of the campaign was directed toward s the collection of crap iron and metal. ext came an inten ive search for copper and zinc • With the Younger Faculty used in "c uts" and engravi ngs. Old Dr. and Mrs. Arden Frandsen an­ Btu.ze r "c uts" from " way back ' were nounce the arrival of a daughter, their hauled out from toraae and their first child, in October. Dr. Frandsen metal reclaimed. Old engravings were is head of the department of psychol­ contributed by various department . ogy at the College. Research labo ratories turned in di . Phillip Bullen , '36, instructor in mili­ * * * carded copper tubing , broken metal tary science and tactics at the College, has been promoted to the rank of cap­ Dr. and Mrs. Philip J. Hart are the equipment , etc. Even the physical tain. proud parents of a son, born October education department had a contribu­ 25. This is the Hart's first child. Dr. tion - broken fen cin g foil of the fin­ I Hart graduated from the College in est teel. A eparate drive to gather Faculty Member Dies 1935, and is now assistant professor Wayne L. Bennion , a soc iate pro­ of physics. old keys is ju st concluded. * * * fesso r of busines administration at Dr. Hendrick s, beside his campus the Co llege ince 1.940, when he tran s­ Professor and Mrs. Arthur D. Smith activities, is erving a lso a vice· announce the birth of their first child , ferred from the Branch Agricultural a boy, born in October. Professor presid ent, in charge of publicity , for Co llege at Cedar City, died October Smith is a '36 graduate, while Mrs. the local sa lva ge committee. He ha 20 after a _s hort illne ss. Hi s illne Smith, the former Grace Jennings, ju t been mad e a member of the local re u I ted from an injury that had not graduated in 1939. gas rationin g board. · been considered seriou .

Page 9 • (Con.t!d / rom *Aggies Ill the Armed Forces plLge 5)

George B. Hendricks volunteered for naval duty in February and is serving in the division of communications at the navy base in Key West, F lorida. L. Dale Holbrook is at the U.S. Na­ va l Training Station at San Diego, Calif. He entered the navy on July 5 and is first class seaman. Lt . Joseph L. Mabey is stationed at Camp Haan, Calif. He has recently been at Camp Callan, Calif ., Camp Hulen, Texas, and Camp Davis, N. C. His wife is the former Amar Hickmen, '36. Alton H. Peterson, captain in the coast artillery, is stationed at Fort Stevens, Oregon . Mrs. Peterson is the former Naomi Anderson, '37. They have a son, age two. Floyd D. Rasmusse n, lieutenant in the army, is living at Vallejo, Calif . Mrs . Rasmussen is the former Marie Ryan , ex-Aggie. They have a daugh­ ter, Judy Ann, age 15 months . Nathan Snyder is a corporal in the army at Fort Monmouth, N. J. J. Lavell Spackman has the rank of captain and is stationed in San Fran­ cisco. William J. Townsend, lieutenant in Ralph H. R edford , '39, has been pro· the army, is stationed at Camp Callan, moted to the rnnk of major in the U. . Calif . He is married (Bernice Mc­ army. He is now stationed at the blLrrage Don S. Gibson, '39, was given his second Cracken) and has a son 15 months old. balloon training center at Camp Tyson, lieuten.ant!s commission in Septemb er, aft er Lyle E. Tripp, another army captain, Paris, Tenn. Ralph is on the general staff cornpletin.g officers training at Fort Ben­ lists Camp Callan as his post . Mrs. at the camp, in charge of personnel. He ning, Georgia. Prior to his trans/er to Fort. Tripp is the former Margaret Ririe, has been on active duty since graduation.. Benning , Don was stationed at Fort Doug­ '36. They have a son, born in Septem­ las, Utah. ber . Bert H. Tucker, Lt. (jg) in the U.S.N.R., is at present stationed at his mailing address . He married Laura Carl Mulleneaux, all-conference end Norfolk , Virginia, according- to Mrs. Stewart in August of last year . on Utah State's championship football Tucker, the former Ada Mae Clark, An derson M. Gray volunteered in team of 1936, is still playing football­ '38. April for duty with the navy and is and good football - for the Great Captain Wayne B. Garff is stationed now a pharmaci st mate, second class. Lakes Na val Training Station eleven. at Fort Winfield Scott. He and Mrs. Zendell McKay Hale is a cadet at Mulleneaux is a coxswain at the sta­ Garff. the former Jeanette Parry , '40, the Quartermast er school at Camp tion and one of the veterans of their and four-month-old son, Blair , were Lee, Virginia . grid squad. recent visitors in Utah. Eldon Hauck, serge ant in the arm y, Clifton J. Davis is now in charge of is stationed at Balboa Island, Calif. personnel, engineers corps, at Waimea, 1937 Alexa nder W. Levi is an aviation Kanai, Hawaii. cadet , training to be a bombadier at Ernest K. Hill, cap tain, is stationed Ja mes Conrad Aag-ard is in the arm y Albuquerque, New Mexico . at Fort Bliss, Texas, according to his air corps where he has qualified as an Merlin B. Lund is stationed at Win­ br other, Arc hie K. Hill , '32, of Logan . engine mechanic. ter Garden, Florida. He has the rank James F. Aamodt, Jr .. is a lieutenant of first lieutenant in the army . 1938 in the U . S. armv and lists his mailing Steve Rushforth is a second lieu­ address as c/ o the postmaster in San tenant in the arm y and is living in San Basil Hadlock is stationed at th e Francisco . He is probably overseas. Francisco. Aberdeen Proving Ground in Mary­ Boyd Berre:v. instructor in the naval Richard Schnepel will graduate from land. He was inducted in August. air corns at Miami, Florida, has the officers training school in December . Chester LaMaunt Neilson is a cadet rank of lieutenant, (jg) . He is at Camp Davis, N. C. Mrs . in the signal corps of the Canadian Paul J. Bingham enlisted in the nav y Schnepel is the former Kathryn Mur­ arm y and is undergoing training at on September 23. He was ernnloyed as dock, '38. Brockville, Ontario. auditor in the Utah State Tax Com­ Emery F. Snyder, now at Camp George Howard Wallen is a second mission office prior to his joining the Clairborne, La., was advanced to a first lieut enant in the army field artillery armed forces. lieutenant in September . He completed at Camp Atterbury, Ind. John M. Bowen, after comnleting his officers training in January. Grant Andraeson is a chief special­ internship at the L. D.S. Hospital in Charles Cole Sorenson is a captain ist in the navy. He joined on April 1. Salt Lake Citv, joined the arm y med­ in th e arm y and is stationed at Camp He is married (Aloha Wade) and has ir.al corns and has been assigned to Davis , N. C. Mrs. Sorenson is the for­ one child. Citmp Barkeley. Texas . Dr. Bowen's mer Helen Yeates , ex-Aggie. Ivan M. Teuscher, promoted to cap­ wife (Doroth y Montrose, '39) is with Lynn M. Thatcher is a first lieuten­ tain in Jun e, is stationed in San Fran­ him . ant in the arm y and is stat ioned on th e cisco. He is married and has a son . Theron Orio Geneaux joined the east coast. Ivan Stahle lists his occupation as army in August and is stationed at Dwayne D. Ward, inducted into the "fig hting" and his addres s as Camp Camp Robinson, Arkansas . army in Februar y, ha s been stationed Kearns, Utah, with the notation that Lyman LaRue Godfrey, corpor al in at Fort Lewis, Washington , but is ex­ he is lea ving soon for an unknown des­ th e army , lists Seattle, Wa shington , as pecting to be transferred. tination . He is married.

Page 10 • (Con.t'dfrom Aggies page 10) ID the Armed Forces *

F loyd H. Gibson is now located at Forest J. Jensen, a lieutenant in the Camp Stewart, Georgia. He has the army, is stationed at Fort Eustis, Va. rank of first lieutenant. Mrs . Jensen is the former Mary Lind­ Dean E. Bischoff, first lieutenant in say, '40. the army intelligence division, is sta ­ Frank L. Lear, lieutenant in the tioned at Camp Haan, California. Mrs. coast artillery, is stationed at Flush­ Bischoff is the former Marian Weeks, ing , N. Y. Mrs. Lear is the former '39. They have a son two years old. Dorothy Pond, '37. Max S. Peterson, formerly employed Junius McClellan, stationed at Seat ­ as an engineer with the International tle, Washington, has been advanced in Boundary Commission, holds the rank rank to captain. Mrs . McClellan is the of caotain and is stationed at Fort former Mildred Clark, '41. They were Cronkhite, Calif . married in May . Ezra B. Cardon is training at the Bruce L. Schmalz, after being sta­ Quartermaster school at Camp Lee, tioned at Fort Douglas and Fort Va. He entered the army in August . Lewis, Wash., has been accepted for Benjamin B. Heywood, inducted into officer training and transferred to Fort the service in August, is stationed at Belvoir, Va. GrP.g-or Field, Spokane, Wash . Earl Spendlove, "Soldier for Uncle Sam," is stationed at Sheppard Field, Harris 0. Van Orden is a second Texas. li 0 utP.nant in the chemical warfare division of the armv at Edgewood ar­ Tracy Maero is stationed at Pigeon SP.nal. Edgewood. Md. He took out a Key, in West Florida, where he is in master'" degrP.e in chemistry at Wash­ command of a commando unit there . in.,.ton State College. Mrs. Maero, the former Ethel Hodges, Daniel L. Jones is a first lieutenant ex-Aggie, and the couple's two chil­ at Fort George G. Meade, Md. He has dren, are living in Florida. Harold Johnson is stationed at 11. master's from Pennsylvania State in 0. 1940. Fort Richardson, Alaska, and has been Wm. D. (Quig) Nielsen , '38, former in· Jack Watson. recently made an en­ there since November 1940. Harold stru ctor in militar y science and tactics at ,iig-n in the U . S. nav:v. will report to was given a permanent commission in the Colleg e, received a promotion. to the J ·OS Ang-elP,:;. C::tlifornia . He was em ­ the coast artillery corps in 1939 and rank of captain in. October. Now station ed nloved bv the PP.rson::tl Fina .nee Com­ has served at Fort Scott, California at Fort MacArthur , California , Quig is on nanv in Salt Lake City, prior to his and Fort Lewis, Washington . In 1940 leave from the College public relations apnointrnent. he married Lucile Short of Burley. office, wher e he was emplo yed wh en he Arnold Owen. former assistant reg-­ They have a new daughter, born Octo­ appli ed for and was granted active service ber 1, 1942. Harold has the rank of i,:;trar at the College. is ::ttteniling- the captain. in 1940. officP.rs training- class "t Gunnell. Iowa. ,.,ftor ~nending- annroximatolv fourteen C. Victor Dover is stationed at Pearl Edgar M. Hayes, inducted in June, months at Fort T.ewis. Washington . Harbor, T. H. Mrs . Dover , the former is attending officers training school at l'{P. ref'eivP.d hiR M.S . deJ!"rP.e in ar.­ Dorothy_ Shurtliff, '37, is employed by Fort Sill, Oklahoma. He married Fay the Spring Canyon Coal Company in l'om,t.ing- at Northwest.P.rn Universitv. Salt Lake City. Robins, '38. Clinton Peterson, who has been at Leonard C. Kearl was awarded his Iowa State College for the past thrPe David A. Green, lieutenant senior gold bars in September, after complet­ vears working on his doctorate in ~Tade, in th~ U.S. naval reserv'e corps, ing officers training. He is stationed horticultiire. was sworn into the navy is now serving overseas. He is a gra ­ at Camp Davis, N. C. Mrs. Kearl is "-Sa candidate for deck officer training. duate of the U.S. navy aviation school the former Dorothy Cowley, ex-Aggie . He is now at Columbia University at­ at Pensacola, Florida. Harold B. Wilcox is chief petty of­ tending the rmecial officers training ficer in the navy, being on leave from school there. Clint's father is a gradu­ 1940 the Bureau of Reclamat ion where he ate of the College in '10. He is now 9Ydt; Jesse Allen was appointed an was a junior engineer . Mrs. Wilcox is making his home in Provo, Utah . the former Helen White, a U of U ensign m the U.S . navy and called to graduate of 1938. active duty in October. He was Elmo Anderson Brough is an ensign 1939 awarded his master's degree at New in the naval reserve and is located at James Pershing Blaisdell, after be­ York University in 1941 and is at the Alameda, Calif. ing awarded his master's degree at the present time attending' the training Captain Eldon G. Hanson is sta­ pniversity of Idaho in 1941 and spend­ school at Cornell University . tioned at the air corps army air force, mg- one year with the soil conservation Bert D. · Anderson, called into the advanced flying school at Hobbs, New service at Emmett, Idaho, entered the army in August, is in the medical Mexico. Mrs. Hanson is the former army in Seotember. He is now sta­ corps and stationed at Camp Barkley, Kather ine McKnig ht, '40 . tioned at Fort Leonard Wood. Mo. Texas. Virgil C. Peterson, sergeant in the with an eng-ineer training battalion. ' Mahonri M. Bishop, an ensign in the army, is engaged in topographical William Mau11:hn Darley is an avia­ navy, is in Washington, D. C., with the mapping at Portland, Oregon . tion cadet at the Miro-Loma Flying Bureau of Ships. Myrin Noble is a naval air cadet at ac,.tiemv ::it Oxnard, Calif. Reed L. Black is a first lieutenant Corpus Christi, Texas. Flovd M. Holdaway, formerly em­ in the army and stationed at Camp Enos James Carlson, who was grant­ ploved by the Bureau of Reclamation Wallace, Texas. He married Helen ed. his master's degree at the Uni­ at Denver, volunteered in Au1tust with Carlisle, ex-Aggie, and they have one versity of Minnesota in 1941, is a lieu­ the navv and was commissioned an child . tenant in the army engineers corps. ""SiJ!"n, He is stationed at Davisville Max B. Clinkinbeard is a captain Dello Dayton, first lieutenant, is Rhode IRiand . ' and is stationed at San Diego, Calif. stationed at San Diego, Calif. He was D<>an R. Jeffs, 'ex39, is stationed at Harry James Dayhuff, captain in the teaching in the Logan senior high El Paso, Texas . He has the rank of army air corps, is commandino- officer school when called to duty. He secured "aotain. Mrs. Jeffs is the former Mar ­ of a pursuit squadron stationed at San his master's degree at the University jorie Weaver, '40. They have one child, Diego, Calif. of California in 1939. a boy . (Con.ti,wed on page 12)

Page 11 November 18. Sam, since graduation, has bee n working in Washington , D. C. Aggies in the Armed Forc es Ray mond (B utc h) Ki mba ll sends (Co 111i,w ed f rom page I I ) news from the U.S . Nava l Air station at Alam eda , California, where he is stati oned as an ensign in the supp ly Bruce W. Die hl, ensign in the nav y, g iven hi s M.S. degree at t he University corps school s, that he "lost everyth ing has been stationed at Montere y, Calif . of Michigan in Jun e. but his pants on the Colorado Uni­ According to news r eaching the Alum­ Max Edwar d Robinson, now sta­ vers it y-Aggie footba ll game in Og­ ni office, he was planning to be marri ed ti oned at New port, R. I., where he is den." He suggests that Romney, Po­ to Ph yllis Hermann of his home town, an ensign in the naval rese rve, writes cock, Berntson, and Merril l might tak e Free port, II I. that he "often th inks of old friend s up a collection and send it his way. Glen E. Downs, staff serg eant in th e and teachers at the good old U.S .A.C." Ra y was expecting to be transferr ed ar my, is "foo d inspector for Uncle Royal S. Shields, ensign, is affiliated to th e graduate schoo l of business at Sam" and is sta tion ed in Salt Lak e with th e nava l recruiting servi ce at Harvard Univ ersity for additional City . Denver . training . Jame s Howard Dunn is assi stant en­ Wende ll H. Sorense n, first lieuten­ Dento n Sta nfor d Richards, now sta­ gineer with the U. S. navy with th e ant, is loca ted at Ca mp Stewart, Ga. t ione d at Camp Forrest, Tennessee, rank of ensign. Mrs. Sorensen is th e former ora Lou ju st recently compl ete d spec ial signa l Joe Elich , va ledictorian for the class Alle n, '40.· cor ps training at Fort Monmouth, New J ersey . He is a second lieutenant . His cf 1940, was induct ed int o th e arm y W. Frantze n Tod d, now a four­ in August whi le studying at th e Uni­ wife is th e former Ara And erson , ex­ cngine pilot with the U.S . arm y air Aggie. vers it y of California, wher e he was cor ps, is stat ioned at Tuc son, Arizona. aw ard ed a mast er 's degre e this pa st He has th e rank of first lieutenant . .Tun e. He is st ati oned at Kees ler Fie ld, 1942 11'.Iississippi. Jar.i es R. Udy is st ationed with an Garr B. As hby is in the army veter­ engin eer ing batt alion at Camp White, inary serv ice and is stationed at the William Stewart Fo lkman is a cor­ Orego n. He is a staff sergeant . por al at Fort Monmouth, N. J . Lang ley F ield Hospita l in Virginia. Jame s Russ ell Wall is a corporal at Garr marri ed Jo sephine Bishop on Glen W. Garlick is a se rgeant at Fort Bennin g, Georgia . June 12. She is attending the USAC For t Riley, Kansa s. Karl E. Ward is att ending a mid ­ and wi ll graduate with the class of '43. Wilbur R. Helmer, captain in th e shipman's school in New York. Reed S. Roberts is in San Antonio, U.S. marine cor ps, is stationed at Texas, tra ining as a flying cadet with Camp P•mdleton, Oceansid e, Calif . C. Edward Wilson is att ending a sig­ nal cor ps schoo l at Fort Monmouth, th e U.S . army . He was assistant en­ Francis Clemens Hinto n, instru ctor N. J . He entered th e army in Febru­ tomo log ist at the Utah Experim ent in aviation and photography, is a first ary and has the rank of corporal. Station during th e past summer. I ieutenant and is stationed at Mid land, W. Don Fro nk has been accepted for Texas. Denn is C. Winter, former ly super­ viso r for the far m security adminis­ officers training after completing basic El mer P. Hun saker, indu cte d into ti:-ation, was inducted into the army in training in the sanitary corps. He th e army in May, is stationed at Fort March. He is now a sergeant in the ent ered the army shortly after gradu­ Warr e:1, Wyoming . army air corps and is attending- the ation and is now stationed at Camp Grant H. Jense n, prior to being officers candidat e schoo l at Miami Barkeley, Texas. called to the arm y in August 1941, was Beach , F lorida. Norwin L. joberg, now in th e army biologist for the U.S . departm ent of Jame s G. Weave r, formerly person­ and stationed at Mare Is land, Califor ­ int er ior in Maryland. He is stationed nel officer at t he Ogden U . S. Employ­ nia, is und ergo ing a 10-we ek period at Spence Field , Moultrie, Georgia , and ment Bureau. is now in the army and of specialized denta l training at the ha s th e rank of first lieut enant . Mr s. stati oned at Bowrnan Field , Louisvill e, nav y ya rd' s clinic . Upon the comp let­ J en sen is the former Elna Clark, ex­ Kentucky. Jims savs that "army life ing of the training, he will be rated a Aggie. dental te chni cian. Roy Alv in Je nse n, after eight months could be much wor se than it rea lly is. " Richar d Ryan ha s been promoted to Guy G. Pace has been promoted to army service in the cavalry, is now an the rank of first lieutenant at Bremer­ aviation cadet at th e army training the rank of captain in the U.S. coast arti llery corp s at Long Beach, Cali­ ton, Washingt on. He is in the coast center in Nashville, Tenn . ar ti llery. Jay J ohn son, at Pearl Harb or on fornia. Mrs. Ryan is th e former Caro l Dece mber 7, 1941, ha s been ordered to Cam pbell, '40. Rex Ha mpto n ha s been promot ed to a new post on the Atlantic coast of first lieut enant at Fort Sheridan, Ill i­ th e United States. 1941 nois. L. Bruce Lake, after att ending of­ Lieute nant (jg) Malin T. W ildin g, Glen T. Nelson has been promot ed ficers training school at Fort Knox , aft er irraduating from the post gradu ­ to a first lieutenant at Brem erton, Tenn., is now locat ed at Camp Cooke, ate schoo l at th '! naval academy at Washington. Calif . Annanolis, Mar yland, has been as­ Roya l B. He nderson, at present, is Ruel H. Moss is a corporal and is signed to a const r,,ction corps in th e go ing to the army electr ica l training stati oned at Camp Da vis, N. C. navy yard at New York. school at F ort Monm outh, New J ersey. Leon Ols~n, a corporal in an anti ­ Chris T. Axe lgard has just recent ly tank company, is station ed at Camp been mad e a second lieut en ant in th e Carso n, Colorado . coast artillery aft er completing a 1943 Dennis V. Peterso n is enr olled in the course for batt er y officers. J ames E . Muse is stationed at Camp V-7 navy training program at Notre Jack M. Shaw, army instructor, is Dame, Indiana . Robinson, Arkansas . He is attending Wayne R. Pugmire, who received a . sta tioned at Fort Sill, Oklahoma . mater ial training schoo l and has the seco nd lieutenant 's commission in Sep­ Warre n M. O'Gara, after receiving rank of corporal. tember, ha s been made assistant to the his prom otion to first lieutenant in Stan ley Hughes is another Aggie at adiutant general at Colorado Springs, September while in th e Hawa iian Is­ San Antonio, Texas, undergoing avia ­ Colo. land s. ha s been transferr ed to th e ti on training as a flying cadet in the Willia m L. Reav ley has ~nter ed th e Atlantic Coast . army training base there. He is the candidates cla ss for commi ss ions to Sam Monson reported for induction son of J. Marion Hughes, '18, of Mil­ th e U.S. marine corps re serve. He was into th e army at Fort Dougla s on ford.

"Mid dle of the Block­ S. E. Needham,. Jeweler Sign of the Clock"

Pag e 12 U. S. A. C. Alumni on Foreign Duty

'3 7 N. Reese Bullen, captain, former - Stan ley Wise, ex'41, ha s been trans­ ly stationed at Pearl Harbor, has ferred overseas to the Atlantic war been transferred to the Atlantic coast, area. accor ding to information reaching the William W. Whitesides, stati oned in Alumni office. Alaska, has been advanced to capta in. Lt. Erwin Scotty Clement, USAC Mrs. Whitesides is the former Beryl Alumni Secretary from 1937 to 1941, Rigby, ex -Agg ie. has been transferred overseas accord­ Robert Murdock, after receiving his ing to information received from Mrs. commission as an ensign and special­ Clement, the former Leona Bunderson, ized radio training, has been stat ioned '38, who, with their son, Mike, is mak­ aco ard the cruiser Richmond in th e ing her home in Brigham City. He Pacific Ocean since July. was st ationed at Fort Dix, New Jer­ Georg e M. Anderson is in charge of sey, when last heard from, over a sepa rate tank unit in the Marine War month ago. Zone in the Pacific area. He reports Captain Ralph C. Wakley has been that on his voyage out he stopped over transferred to Hawaii with the balloon at an island where Captain Vern Larrage crew. Crockett and Lt. Judd Harris were '38 Lt. Ralph G. DeMoisey is now stationed. stationed in South America. Wallace Russell Chri stense n, '41, is '39 Lt. Ray H. White is now on over- stationed in the Aleutian Island s. He seas dutv in the Pacific War area. is a first lieutenant in the coast artil­ Mrs. White, "the former Maretta Ny­ lery corps. Mrs. Christensen, the for­ man, '38, is instructor of foods and nu­ mer Almeda Brown, '43, is att ending trition this year at the Branch Agri­ the College and will graduate in the cultural College at Cedar City. spring. Lt. Erwin "Scotty" Clement, '37 Ensign George S. Stains is now food Ca rl Hedborg , also a first lieutenant, Transferred over seas inspector and supervisor of insect con­ is stationed at the same base as Rus­ trol at Pearl Harbor, T. H. sell Christensen-A leutian Islands. John Clyd e Carlisle, yeoman second Lt. Elmer Olson is among tho se '22 Lt. Colonel Clifford ~tevenson ~s class, is on overseas duty with the listed on overseas duty. He entered executive officer of his army unit U.S. navy. active service in the army imm ediate­ now stationed in the Aleutian Islands, Melvin J. Greaves, called to activ e ly upon graduation. it was learned by the Alumni office. duty Februar y 25, 1942, after complet­ Randall E. Sorenson is assistant He has been at his present post five ing his M.C.E. at Cornell University, radio engineer in Honolulu, Hawaii. months, previous to which he was sta­ is now stationed at Fort Clayton, Pan­ B. C. Smith, enlisted in the marine s tioned at Camp Callan, California, and am a. He is a lieutenant in the coast immedfately following graduation, is Fort Lewis, Washington. Colonel Stev­ artillery, anti-aircraft division, of th e now somewhere in the South Pacific. enson graduated from the College _in army. Mrs. Greaves is the former Jack S. Pace, in his capacity as of­ 1922 with a reserve officer's commis­ Bertha Pitcher, 'N39 . ficer in charge of anti -ai rcraft aboard sion and la ter attended the University '40 Otis M. Plant has been promoted ship, has made several trips into of California, at Berkeley, California, to the rank of first lieutenant in varied war zones; one to Chile, New where he was awarded his master's Alaska. Zealand, and Australia, to Trinidad degree in 1926. He married Nan Rich­ Charle s 0. Peterson has been pro­ and other ports in the Canal Zone. At ards of Logan. She and her two chil­ moted to the rank of corporal in the present he is attending an anti­ dren are living in Salt Lake City. U.S . army in Australia . Charles en­ aircraft school in Texas. '31 Harry S. Bahen is stationed tered the army in February, 1941. Lt. Lynn C. Beyeler is listed as be­ somewhere in South America. Lt. Jo sep h Garland Woodward is ing at Tulagia in the Solomon Islands. '35 Lt. Albert Jun e Webber is in stationed at Talera , Peru. Mrs. Wood­ Thomas M. Hall, first lieutenant, is Alaska . ward is the former Goldie McFarland , an army instructor in gunnery in '36 Captain Joe E. Whitesides is on 'N38 . Honolulu, T. H. After graduation from active duty with th e army some­ Raymond H. Lawrence is on over­ the USAC he studied anti-aircraft where in the Pacific. seas duty as weather forecaster in the t"!chniqu e at Fort Monroe, Virginia, Frederick Ray Baugh is among th e U. S. air corps . Before joining the then was sent to Fort Haan, Califor ­ Aggies listed in Alaska . He holds th e army in May, he was a social welfare nia. Immediately after th e Japanes e rank of first lieut enant. worker at Cedar City, Utah. He has attack on Pearl Harbor , Tom was Morris joberg, son of Mr . and Mrs. the rank of corporal. transferred to th e Hawaiian Island s. Oscar Sjoberg, of Millville, recently Set h Maughan has been promoted to '42 Wayne Collings was inducted into promot ed to a first lieutenant in the first lieutenant in a tank unit of the the army on Jul y 1 and ha s been army air corps, was last reported at coast artillery corps and is now serv­ ordered overseas in the Atlantic area . Fort Dix, New Jerse y. His parents in­ ing in England. Dean G. Hall, first lieutenant with dicate that it is likely that he now has C. Maurice John son, somewhere in the army air corps, left August 9 for been transferred overseas. Morris the south Pacific, has been promoted overseas duty in the Pacific war zone. graduated from the College in 1936. to the rank of captain in the marine Stan ley L. Wise is in the medical Russell E. Reeve is now with the corps . division of the army air corps and has U.S. arm y in Ireland. He was in his '41 Lt. Clyde Gessel is serving with been sent to Eng land. fourth year in engin eer ing at George • the army air force in Australia. Robert F. Nilson has been sent to Washington University when he en­ Lt. Nolan Griffin is stationed at Fort Hawaii. He is a lieutenant in the tered the service. Kamehameha, Hawaii. army. Loile J. Bailey is an ensign stationed Lt. Dale W. Olsen has been promo­ Wayne R. Collings is a crypto­ aboard the U.S.S. Rocket now on ted to the rank of first lieutenant. He grapher in the American Air Forc es active duty with the Pacific fleet. Prior is "tationed in Hawaii. and is now stationed "somewhere in to his naval appointment, he was em­ Ensign Robert Evans Murdock, af ­ Africa." ployed by the U.S . department of ter completing a specia l course in Other Aggies in the Alaska n theatre agriculture as a farm supervisor. Loile n,i.va l train ing leading to his commis­ of war include : Ben Bingham Lee was married to Anne Fugal, a former sion, has been assigned to the Panama Cardon, '40, Bob Broberg, Ted Crock­ BYU student. Canal area. ett, and William Larsen .

Page 13 What the Alumni Are Doing

Chase Kearl , '20, formerly of Pres­ 1904-20 ton, Idaho, is now manager of the Ray H. Fisher, M.D., '04, is now lo­ Franklin County Sugar Company, at cated in his son's new office building Mt. Clemens, Michigan. He and Mrs. at 3588 Fruitvale Avenue, Oakland, Kearl had three of their sons graduate California. Dr. Fisher and his son, Dr. from Utah State in 1941-Bryant, Del­ Fred D. Fisher, have been associated mar and Spencer. for the past seven years . Fred gradu­ ' Albert Yard Zahri kie, ex-Aggie and ated from the medical department of husband of Kathryn Thomas Zabriskie, the University of California in 1935 '20, died in a Salt Lake hospital after and is now with the first medical regi­ an illness of three weeks in Septem­ ment at Fort Ord, California . His ber. He was wide ly known in Utah father carried on alone "altogether too insurance circles and was district man­ busy, hut not too busy to rememb~r ager of the American National Insur­ kindly his old alma mater on the hill ance Company at the time of his un­ at Logan, Utah ." expected death . Mr. Zabriskie was John H. Peterson, '13, of Smithfie ld, affiliated with Sigma Chi fraternity was one of the first Aggies to send in and a member of the football and bas­ their current dues this year. Mr. Pe­ ketball squad s while at the College. terson, after graduating from the Col­ Ray J. Silvers, ex'21, writes an in­ lege, taug-ht school for 25 years , 23 teresting letter from Tulare, Califor­ years at North Cache and two years nia, where he has been for the past at Smithfie ld. Previous to graduation nine years associat ed wit h the J. C. he had taught for ten years. He re­ Penney Company there. "When you tired in 1940. He has been ·active in are so close to the College, possibly church work, having filled two mis­ you can't realize what a tonic it is to sions and held various church posi­ get the Quarterly with its news and tions, including that of suoerintendent happenings of the College and the of Sunday School in both his ward and alumni. Last summer I saw Dr. Wal­ stake . He has served as bishop of the lace Parkinson, '22, after he returned Dr. Seth T. Shaw, '31 Smithfie ld Second Ward. from a trip to Logan and was very Edwin J. Holmgren . '13 , of Garland, much interested in his description of Set h T. Shaw, a graduate of the Col­ hai< a daug-hter , Beverly, attending the the arrangement of the campus as it leg e in 1931, with a master's the fol­ College this year. Recently Beverly, a is today . Needless to say, it is very lowing year, is Utah Director of Agri­ fres hman, was chosen for the year as different than it was back in the Twen­ cultural Trade Relations, Inc., agricul­ sponsor in the R.O.T.C. ties." tural consultants to various farm and Dr . Tura M. Aldous, president of 1920-26 business organizations throughout the th e cla ss of '16 and veteran of World United States and Canada. Dr. Shaw War I, is "rarinl{ to go again, if and Dr. Maurice B. Linford, '22, of the replaced the late Fred W. Merrill, an when called." He has been in Tooele faculty of the University of Hawaii, Aggie grad of 1899. He has his head­ for the past 15 years practicing in is doing noteworthy research work quarters in Salt Lake City. general and industrial medicine. He is there on plant diseases. The October Dr. Shaw joined the faculty of the also surireon for the Tooele Ordnance issue of the Science News Letter re­ Brigham Young University in 1932 as depot. Mrs . Aldous is the former viewed briefly his findings concerning instructor in horticulture, rising to the .Tessie Snalford, ex-Aggie. They have roundworms, the cause of the costly rank of professor of horticulture, his five children . root-gall or root-knot . Mrs . Linford is position in June 1941, when he re­ in Logan doing some teaching at the signed to become Commissioner of College. Marketing in the Utah State Depart­ Mart ha Geddes, '24, of Franklin, ment of Agriculture . One year lat er, Idaho, has been appointed coordinator he resigned this post to accept his Rechow-Morton for the Preston, Idaho, schools. She present position, which offers him an did graduate work in sociology at the unparalleled opportunity to serve agri­ College this past year . cultur e in Utah and thus carry on with "Fine Footwear" Lorenzo A. Richards , '26, on lea ve the work in which he is most deeply of absence from his rel{ular work as interested. His new work will bring senior soil physicist with the U . S. Re­ him in close contact with farm people g-ional Salinity Laboratory in River ­ and their organizations. side. California, is current ly with the In addition to his master's degree, California Institute of Technology, Dr. Shaw holds a Ph .D., conferred in working on war projects. 1940 after completing graduate wor k Lucille Kunz-Abbott, '26, is physical at the University of Missouri in 1936 Jack Morton, '29 educat ion teacher in the Denver city and 1937. school. Mrs. Shaw is the former Edith Park­ inson, an ex-Aggie . They have one Tom Morton.'32 R. K. Bischoff, '26, who has just son, Tom. Dr. Shaw is the son of Mr. completed payments on his alumni life and Mrs. H. A. Shaw of Logan. membership, sends information that George R. Henderson, '29, is now a major in the remount division of the Ariel C. Merrill, '26, is living in Salt U.S. army at Camp Reno, Arkansas; Lake City, where he is vice -president also that he believes Frank Kennard, and general manager for the Clover­ '24, has had a recent promotion to Lt. Leaf Dairy, one of the important dairy Colonel in the Coast Defense area. Mr. jobs in the state. He is married (Edith LOGAN, UTAH Bischoff is affiliated with the Great Horsley, 'ex25) and has three children . Western Sugar Company at Windsor, Ariel ha s his M.S. degree from Michi­ Colorado. gan State 'College, 1928.

Page 14 From Year to Year

survived by hi s wife, Mrs. E lsie Jo seph A. Couch is making his home Schorzman Clark of Burley. in Provo, where he is affiliated with Dr. Joseph Clare Hayward, '33, is Safeway Stores. back in Logan and is associated with Very! Clayton Henry claims two oc­ the Budge Clini c. He has an excep­ cupations, teaching and farming. He tionally fine record in his past medical lives at Tremonton. studies . Beth Nelson Fry resides in Arling­ Paul B. Larsen, '33, is supervisor of ton , Virginia, where her husband (H. farm sales at th e Union Central Life B. Fry) is associated with the Price Insurance Company at Minneapolis, Control Administration. They have Minnesota. He has made application two boys . to join the naval reserve aviation LaRue Orwin-Little is making her corps, but at the time we last heard home in Tremonton for the duration. from him, his application had not been Her husband (Robert I. Little) is in acted on. He sends greetings to his the army. They ha ve three children. instructors at the College--"most of Vera 0. Greaves, who was awarded the profs there will surely rememb er her doctorate degree in 1939, is nutri­ the strugg les they had with me." tional specialist at the University of Orville S. Lee, '34, who has received California, Berkeley. has master's degree at the USAC, and Lester A. Hartvigsen, married Janu­ has taken advanced studies at Chicago ary 1, 1942 to Evelyn Williams, is as­ University, has accepted a position at sociated with the AAA office at Ameri­ the South Cache high school teaching can Falls, Idaho. accounting and economics. Franklin Sant is county supervisor of the Farm Security Administration at Clifton, Idaho. He expects to be in­ 1935 ducted into the army soon . John M. Crowl is playing an import­ Barbara M. Nie lsen -Bosen is living Anthony W. Stephenson, '38 ant role in the nation's struggle to es­ in Challis, Idaho, where her husband tablish a new source of rubber. He is (Leland Bosen) is employed by the Anthony W. Stephenson, after teach­ head nurseryman of a large quayule Forest Service. They have one daugh­ ing in Delta, Hinckley and Cedar City, project at Jndio, California . ter. has accepted the post of instructor in Mr. and Mrs. Ross D. Watson (Ellen Eldon G. _Wintle is engineer for the accounting and business administra­ Kemp, '36) both received doctorate de­ Standard 011 Co. of California and is tion at the Branch Agricultural Col­ grees from Cornell University in Sep­ living in El Cenito, Calif. He is mar­ lege in Cedar. He also serves as chair­ tember. Ross did his work in plant ried (Melba Layman) but has no chil­ man of the business department there. pathology and Ellen did hers in the dren. field of child nutrition. Ross is plant Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Taylor pathologist at the Texas Agricultural (Edna Cardon, '36) are living at Pay­ Experiment Station at Tyler, Texas, ette, Idaho. 1928-34 while his wife has assumed full-time "':'inford Melvin Barrus is irrigation Wallace Jorgensen Liddle, '28, is duties as a homemaker. engmeer for the Garland sugar 'fac­ playing a very important role in the Lloyd N. Johnson , former alumni tory at Garland, Utah . construction of the Alaska highway exec uti ve secretary and now special Fred A. Swa lberg and Helen Rich­ which is now nearing completion. Mr. agent for the investigation division of '.1rds-Swalberg are making their home Liddle is U.S. Government materials the Agricultural Marketing Adminis­ m Marysvale, Utah, where Fred is engineer for the southern half of the tration, has been transferred from San (Continued on page 16) project from Edmonton to Fairbanks. Francisco to Denver, Colorado. Mrs. Previous to this appointment, he was Johnson is the former Marie Cooley, in charge of the Bureau of Standards '38, student body vice-prexy of that in San Francisco. Mrs. Liddle and same year . They have one child, a boy. their three children are making their Lt. Grant H. Calder, U.S. naval re­ home in Hyrum. serve, former secretary to the presi­ "Charge It" E. A. Frederickson, '28, was among dent of the University of Utah, has those accepting positions at the Colo­ been assigned to Princeton University rado State College at Boulder for this as instructor of ordnance and gunnery at year. at the naval officers training school Alta Hirst, '28, accepted a position there. at Weber Junior College as Home Eco­ Sheldon Bergeson resigned his posi­ C. C. Anderson nomics instructor after spending last tion of coordinator for the Cache year in the same capacity at Snow County school district to accept a posi­ College, Ephraim. tion with the American Red Cross. He Company Evelyn Hodges, '29, assistant pro­ has been assigned to the Ogden area. fessor of social work, is entering her fifth year at Utah State. She has her M.S. degree from the University of 1936 Chicago and has spent three years in Burdell Porter is living in Las Ve­ Cache Valley's graduate social work training. gas, Nevada, where he is a U. P . bus Glen Clair Clark, '30, died November driver. He is married (Ina Cram) and 1 in Los Angeles , California, following has one child. Shopping a heart attack. He was a member of Evelyn Webb is teaching school at the first flight training class at Ran­ Richmond, Utah. dolph field. Captain Clark, who joined Roland W. Dance, sales manager for Center the U .S. army air corps in 1930, was Colville Ice Cream Co., is living in retired from service in May 1942, be­ Salt Lake City . He married Eileen cause of injuries received in a plane Freeman, U of U graduate , and they accident in Nebraska in 1941. He is have two chi ldr en.

Page 15 the Remington Arm s plant . Both at­ Alumni News tended th e University of Utah in 1940. (Continu ed Jru111f)ag c IS) Emma Lou McEntire is employed by rapidly building up a reputation for a New York company as fabric stylist. progressive farming. They have two She was awarded a master's degree chi ldr en, Karen and Carma Rae. from Columbia University on August Raymond N. Murdock is vocatio nal 15th. agricultural instructor at Princeton Arthur D. Gudmundson, after com­ J oint Union high school, Princeton, plet ing two years of medical training Ca lif . at the University of Utah, has enro lled Julian LeRoy Robin son, Jr., is head at the University of Louisville, Ken­ of the farm implement department, tucky, for further study. He married Sears Roebuck Co., Salt Lake City. He Helen Burns, ex-Aggie . married Anita Fullmer and they have Doug las M. Jon es ha s been accepted one child , a gir l. for the army air corps and expects to Dora Larson is another Salt Laker. leave for training soon . He is district She is teaching in the capital city. range examiner at Nephi, Utah. orman H. Simp son, aft er working Jam es W. Wilson is another Aggie as assistant chief chemist at the Con­ in the soi l conservation serv ice. He is solidat ed Aircraft Company's San Di­ at White Sa lmon, Washington. ego plant, transferred to Fort Worth, Elvin Down s is anot her agricultural Texas, where he is head chem ist for instructor. He is teaching in Cedar the same company . City . V. Dick Johnson is another em ploye e LaMar Esplin ha s joined the fac ult y of the Remington Arms plant at Salt of the Colorado State College at Boul­ Lake City. He is married (Dorothy der. Griffin, BYU '36) and has two children. Mark A. Shipl ey is affiliated wi th Carro ll King, awarded his doctorate the Un iversity of Nevada experiment degree at Northwestern University Bill Ward, '40 stat ion at Reno. He is married and ha s last spring, is doing research work in one child, a girl. chemistry at that school. William B. Ward has been named chief of the information section for J enni e Duke, after teaching since Orval Cheney is assistant engineer graduation, is now associated with the for the U.S. Engineer Agency in Salt the agricultural marketing adminis­ tration. Bill, after graduation from Farm Security Administration at Ran­ Lake City. He married LaNore Chris­ dolph. tiansen, ex-Aggie. the College, attended the Wisconsin University where he was awarded a Howar d Hinchcliff is teaching at the Emma Lou Weston-Baker is teach­ Centra l school in Ogden . This past ing speech and English at the Burley master's degree in journalism in 1940. He immediately joined the information summer he was emp loyed by the forest high school, Idaho . She was married service in the Bridger Forest, Wyo­ to Roy Baker in 1941. staff of the agricultura l marketing ad­ ministration and has been director of ming . 1937 information in various sections of the Kathryn John son-Karikka ha s been Rebecca Darley-Pack er is living just nation befor e his present appointment visiting in Ogden during the fall whi le out of Preston, Idaho. After filling an as chi ef. her hu sband, Lt . A . K. Karikka, is on L. D. S. mission in Texas in 1939, Re­ army maneuvers in Tennessee. Lt . becca taught one year at North Cache Karikka is a graduate of Cornell Uni­ high schoo l. In November 1940, she versity and Katherine was granted her married Vaughan Packer . They have 1938 master's degree at that school. a new baby gir l, Vonda. Floyd lat er, new coach at the Wa ­ Lloyd K. Schlappi sends word from Mary Rae Christensen-Sycamore is satch high schoo l at Heber City, led Randloph, Utah, that he "still thinks living in Memphis, Tennessee, where his grid eleven to the first Summit th e U.S .A.C. is the tops of them all." her husband (Leland Sycamore, U of district title in ten years this past He is county superv isor for the F.S.A ., U '40) is studying medicine. month. In 1941, his six-man squad at married (Carol Remund), and ha s two Beulah Leona Andrus is teaching at Cedar City won the state champion ­ chi ldr en . Ucon, Idaho . ship. lvanowna Goff-B ramwe ll is living at Bernard F. Magnusson is deputy re­ Kathryn Dixon-L un t is making her Blackfoot, Idaho, where her husband cor der at Phoenix, Arizona . He and home in Provo while her husband is a druggist. The y ha ve two childr en . Mrs. Magnusson , the former Cleone (Max L. Lunt) is in the army. He is Marjorie Crookston - Christensen is Richins, have two children, both boys. stat ioned at Mather Field, Sacra­ living in Bancroft, Idaho. She married Mr. an d Mrs . Ray Tho mp son (Mar­ mento, California, where he is in the Arves L. Christensen in May . Marjorie garet Hill, '39) are still living in Madi­ air corps. is the daughter of R. Burn s Crookston, son, Wisconsin , where Ray is attending 'ex 13, of Logan. the University of Wisconsin. He ex­ 1939 Otis L. Orton reports from Ely, Ne­ pects to get his doctorate degree some Eleanor Skeen is at present attend­ vada, where he is assistant soil tech­ time in 1943. ing the University of Chicago, where nologist, that he is working with Gale Wayne W. McWhorter is field engi­ she is making a special study of re­ C. John son, '36, who is district con­ neer for Koppers Co. at the Geneva habilitation work in the psychiatric serv ationist there. That district, inci­ steel plant , near Provo. field. She is on a social work fe llow­ dentally, is the lar gest one in the Uni­ Mr. and Mrs . Alva M. Mickelsen ship granted by the University and ted States. (Hazel Chapin, '37) reside in Pioche, expects to comp lete requirements for · Rulon S. McCarrey, formerly em­ Nevada, where Mr. Mickelsen is assist­ a master's degree by June. After four ployed at the Cache County Welfare ant cashier of the Pioc he bank. Th ey quarters at the University in 1939-40, Office and now on an L. D.S. mission ha ve a new baby girl. · E leanor organized the chi ldren's phase in Argent ina , is enjoying his work Rex M. J ensen is vocationa l agri­ of social work in Sev ier County the th ere according to a letter received cultural instr uctor at Richfield, Utah. fo llowing year. In addition to the from him by the USAC Alumni office. He did one yea r of graduate wor k at University fellowship, she has a scho­ Mr. McCarrey graduated in 1937 from the USAC in 1940-41. He married larship from the State of Utah which the College and came back later to Emilie Roberts and they have one requires her return to the state for a complete a master's degree in socia l child, a daughter three months old. year of service. E leanor plans to em­ work. This degree was granted him Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Boulton phasize the importance and necessity in 1941. (Florence Jackson, '38) is associated of chi ld guidance in conjunction wit h Marian Peterson has been appointed with the Clover -Leaf Dairy at Everett, child development work, upon her re­ re creation assistant in the military and Washington. turn to Utah . naval division of the American Red Myra Barker-Carson is living in Salt Walter Peay is federa l collaborator Cross. She ha s been assigned to the Lake City, where her husband (Oliver in the Bureau of Entomology and San Francisco area. Carson, U of U, '41) is emp loyed at P lant Quarantine at the College.

Pag e lb Vic Aust in is living at Idaho Fa lls, H. Stewa rt , '10, count y agric ultura l Idaho, where he is doing we ll in the agent at Brigham City. farming business. Mrs. Austin is the 1919 Alumnus Returns Darwin Evans and Clayton Allr ed, former Ruth Gunn, '38. They have a '39, are now work ing on their mast er's new baby gir l, Ann E lizabet h, age four To College Studies deg rees in speech at th e Univers ity of months. Her husband is in the army Minnesota . Mrs. Evans is the former Mr. and Mrs . Jack E. Nielse n (Vir­ and two of her children are at­ G,mee Wa ngsgaa rd , '40 . ginia Mortensen, '38) are living in tendi ng the USAC. Mrs . Bessie Vaug hn Madsen has accepted the Durango, Colorado, where Jack is em­ Morrison -Es kelsen, '19, cou ldn 't pest of instructor in vocat ional agr i­ ployed by the U . S. Bureau of Recla­ join the former, so now she's culture at North Sanpete high schoo l, mation . back at the College st ud ying for Mt. Pleasant . Grac 2 Teuscher-Wilcox is residing her second degree in home eco­ 1941 in Montp elier, Idaho, where her hu s­ nomics . Mrs. Eske lsen got her first degree ju st after th e first J . Ster lin g Rose is on an L. D.S. band (Vern Art hur Wilcox) is rail­ miss ion in New York . road eng ineer for the Union Pacific . Wor ld War and she now intends to finish req u irem..ents for a de­ Art ha F. Wint er -Calderw ood, wife They have a daughter, aged 14 months. of Lt. S. G. Calderwood, is living in Mr. and Mrs . Harold Stoker (Marcia gree in voca tional hom e eco­ nomics by June. Her daught er, Riverside, California. Ann Nicholas, '40) are living in Hol­ Mr. and Mrs. Elwo od Jay Ste phen s lister, California, where Harold is vo­ Annora, will receive her degr ee in child deve lopme nt at t he sam e (Gertru de Childs) bot h graduates of cationa l agriculture teacher in the San 1941, are living at Bancroft, Idaho . Denito Count y high schoo l and junior time. Lieut enant Colonel Ruel M. J . Lqssil Sharp sends word that he college . They have a daughter one and is planning to attend sum mer school cn2 -ha lf years of age. Es kelsen was ca lled to duty in th e Pacific area last August . At at Utah State. At present he is teach ­ Mr. and Mrs. John P. Ahern are liv­ ing at Sa lmon, Id aho . He married ing . in Fallon , Nevada. Mrs . Ahern is that time Mrs. Eskelsen moved to Logan, where her oldest E '.s ie J oyce Fox, Univers it y of Idaho . t he former Martha Lalli s, ex-Aggie. Ruth Kyg·ar, married in October to They have two gir ls, the last one born daughter and a son, Quin n, are students at the College. Four Samue l N. Cowley, is comptometer on November 2. J ohn is county exten­ operator for Auerbac h's department sion agent for the University of Ne­ younger chi ldr en are attending the city schoo ls in Logan. store in Sa lt Lake City. va da, and sends word that they "m iss Jerold Shepherd ha s been called int o the A . C. a lot ." the army and, according to informa ­ Virginia Ririe Wilde is living at tion rea ching the Alumni office, is sta­ Raymond, Alberta, Canada . La wre nce C. Davis en listed in th e army air corps but as yet has not been tion ed temporarily at Camp Kearns, Eva Pulley, now public health nurs e Utah. Mrs. Shepherd, the former Olive in Par k City, Utah, was given her de­ ca lled into training. Lola Willa J ensen-Romano is tech­ Nielsen, '38, is making her home in gree of Registered Nurse at J ohns Los Ange les, where she is emp loyed in Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore rece nt ­ nical librarian at Hill Field , Ogden. Lola married Patric k Romano in Janu­ the Bank of Californ ia . ly. Eva sends word that she enj oyed ina As hby is home economics her work in t he East very much, but ary. LaMa r Roge rs is attending the Tem­ teac her at the high school at Fillmor e. that she was glad to get back . "T he Joseph Edward West is a junior en­ Rockies never looked more beautiful." ple University medical school in Phila­ delphia. g ineer with the U . S. Bureau of Recla­ Roy L. Henri e is farm age nt in the Garland D. Ca ll lives at Rea, Idah o, mati on at Denver, Colorado. Indian Service at the F ort Belknap where he is a forest guard for the Age ncy at Harlem, Montana. U.S. forest serv ice. Mrs. Call is the 1942 Kenneth (Day) A. Bunk er died Oc­ former Phyllis Stod da r d. They have a Doris Hughes and Marna Peterson tober 28 in a Provo hospital following boy two and one-half years of age. are both teaching at the Gunnison five weeks of illn ess. He grad uat ed E ldr ed J. Sw app , residing in Holly­ high school, Gunnison, Uta h. from the College in 1939, taking out wood, California, is mechanical in­ Chad K. Ander son and Mar y Hatch his degree in civi l engineering . He spector for Lockh eed Aircraft Com­ are teaching at Rockland, Idaho . had been emp loyed in forestry wor k pany there . Dorothy Gene Peter son, who ma­ for more ·than a year and had made C. Eugene Dallimore , assistant plant jored in child development, is now at­ his home in Spr ingv ille. He was un­ patho logist at the Nebraska Exper i­ tending the Merri ll Pa lmer schoo l at married. mental Farm, is making hi s home in Detroit on a st ud ent assistantship. She 1940 Scottsb luff, Nebraska. 1s the daughter of Charl es 0. Peterson, Irene B. Leigh-H erb ert , wife of Cap­ ex-Agg ie, of Logan. Floy d K. Harm sto n is agricultural ta in R. M. Herb ert , is living in Costa Charles B. McConne ll is expecting to stat istician for the government in Sa lt Mesa, Californ ia . Th ey hav e a son, be ca lled into the army soon. He is Lake City. Mrs. Harmston is the for­ age five months. living in Ogden. mer Winifred Cook, ex-Agg ie. Richard A. Chamber s is a rating ex­ Delores Birch is teaching school at Noland F. Nelson is doing wild life am iner for the U. S. Civil Service in Neo la, Duch esne County, Uta h. researc h in the Uta h Fish and Game Ogden. Mrs . Chamb ers is the former Norman I. Heato n is engineer for Department , Brig ham Cit y. He mar­ Marie Budge, 'ex41. the Columb ia Stee l company's iron ried Katherine Maurer of Logan, ex­ Allabe ll Belnap is teaching at th e mines at Cedar City . He married Cora Agg ie. Bru neau high schoo l at Bruneau, Ida­ Kent, ex-Agg ie, and they have a Elida Soren son-Pear son resides at ho. daughter, age two years . More, Idaho, where her hu sband (Rod­ Darwin Gubler is in Independence , Alvin Warnick is now stat ioned at ney A. Pearson, Un iversity of Idaho , Missouri, filling a mission for t he the army air corps training school at '35 ) is a livestock farmer. L. D. S. church . Madison, Wisconsin, wher e he is being Rulon Glen Miller, after teaching Harry Thurston, after a brief but given a thorough course in radio me­ school for two years in Box E lder successfu l coaching career, now re­ chanics . He expects to finish the course County, accepted a position as book­ sides at Pocate llo, Idaho , where he is in January. keeper with the Brown Ice Cream storP.keeper for the U. S. Army Eng i­ Chall E. All red reports in from Company in Ogden. neers. Camp Carson, Colorado, that he lik es Pau l Huefner is now economist in Adeli a Lind say is teaching in th e th e army swe ll, is having a good time, the U.S . Bur ea u of Labor Statist ics high schoo l at Snowflake, Arizona . but will be glad when it is over · and at Sa lt Lake City. Prio r to his present Lelwin Floyd Wilkinson is a super ­ he is ab le to return home and to ·school. appo intm ent, he was retail price con ­ visor for the farm securit y admin is­ Ora Bills ha s been appoint ed head su ltant for th e state of Idaho. tration at Pangu itch, Utah . librarian at the Abraham high school, Israel C. Heaton , former ass istant in Leonard Jam es ha s res igned from Japanese educat ion project. This is a the College P. E . department, is di­ his position at . Weiser, Idaho, and is 1200-student school. recto r of physical educat ion and coac h awaiting ca ll for volunt eer officer Perry Leav itt has accept ed the post at the Carbon Junior College, Price, training. Mrs. J ames is the former as instructor in physical educa tion and Uta h. Bet h tewart, '40, daughter of Robert coac h at Bear River high school.

Pag e 17 Class of '64 Marriages (Continu ed fr om page 4) USAC Life Me mbership (Continued fr om page 7) Shirley Jones Marchant, '39, and E. T. Directory Marchant - October, Cedar City, Note: Bold-fac e names ar e those of Alumni • Pere A . R eeve, '41, to Verda Perkin. Utah. who hav e paid their member ship in full. All Woodrow If/. Scott, '41, to Clell Morrell. Ona Jones Lewis, '39, and B. W. Lewis other s are making reg ular yearly l)ayment s. Isabel lf/ade, '41, to Paul R. Merrill. -August, Salt Lak e City, Utah. Everett Thorpe, '43, to Don:s Britzell. Delsa P. Adamson Olson , '36, and Grant E. Nielson, '41, to Margaret If/ alker . Ralph D. Olson, '41-July, Portage, 1894-1904 John Stan.Ley Welch, '41, to Unita lf/ood- Utah. lan.d, 'ex43. Forrest Linden Castle, '39, and Claris Robert Wesley Erwin, '94 Janet If/ h.eatley, '41, to Phillip And rew Reese, ex-Aggie-July, Logan, Ut. Lemay, Missouri Marsh.. Merrill H . Carlson, '39, and Ruth Ann Andrew B. Larsen, '94 • Ned Packer Clyde, '42, to Shirlee Carlson-October 21, Ogden, Utah. Salt Lake City, Utah Beutler of Logan. Elain Jones Parrish, '40, and Colson F. Par· Will iam Peterson, '99 David Thomas Clark, '42, to Elizabeth rish, '39- ovembe r 2, Ogden, Utah. Logan, Utah Wardleigh of Ogden. Mary Leonard Onstott, '37, and Oscar L. Lydia Holmgr en Tanner, '03 Evart Jens en, '42, to Rebecca Bick­ Onstott , '39-Augu st, Farmington, Utah.. Ogden, Utah more. Dale L. Barton, '38, and Florence Rich­ Elme r George Peterson , '04 Maureen Cook, '42, to Ralph W. Win­ ter Barton-June, Kaysville, Utah. Logan, Utah terton . Wayne H. Hinton, '37, and Jean Ken­ Warren Gibbs Swendsen, '04 Robert Corey, '42, to Betty Lou Balch dall Hinton, '37-June, St . George, Boise, Idaho of Ogden. Utah . Frank Lorenzo West, '04 Preston D. Johnson, '42, to Anna Lou Ste phen L. · Dunford, '36, and Mae Salt Lake City, Utah Merrill . Christen sen Dunford - July, Salt Margaret Ericksen, '42, to Mont Ken­ Lake City, Utah. ney, '40. Mildred Theurer Baer, '39, and Reuben 1905- 1908 Cara Genieve Klinger , '42, to Robert M. Baer-October 18, Tremonton , J ohn Franklin Fred erickson, '05 A. Zirker , '42. Utah . Malad , Idaho • Ad ele Christen.sen, '42, to Dale Young, Ario B. Weston , '40, and Vernetta S. Grover Rich, '05 '42. Coombs Weston, ex-Aggie-June, Salt Lak e Cit y, Utah Willard K . Maughan, '42, to Helen Marie Logan, Utah. Mildred Forgeon Rich, '06 Carlson. Keith Henry Peterson, '36, and Bemi ce Salt Lake City, Utah Helen Mil es, '42, to A. Grant Holman, '42. Charlesworth Peterson- August , Winne· F. D. Farre ll, '07 Don T. Nielsen, '42, to Luwana Beckstead . bago, Ne braska. Manhattan, Kansas Betty Perkins, '42, of Mur taugh, Idaho, to Elsie Cyrena Whitmor e, '40, and Lawr ence Melvin C. Harris, '08 Judd Harris, '41, of Logan.. Whitmore- July, St. Anthony , Idaho. Logan, Utah Margaret Potter, '42, to Norman L. Perry, Reed Thomson, '38, and Faun Douglas George R. Hill, Jr., '08 '4 1. Thomson-July, Baker, Nevada . Salt Lake City, Utah Denton tanford Richards, '42, to Ara An­ Kenneth L. Thomas, '40, and Ora Eunice Estella Miles, '08 dersen. Peters Thomas-August, Oakland, Salt Lake City, Utah Berth.a Monson, '42, to Elm er P. Hunsaker, California . Will iam Laurence Walker, '08 '40. Veril F. Moss, '38, and Lois E. Penfold New York , New York • Edward L. Scartezina, '42, to Jessie Moss - September 22, Salt Lake Ray . City, Utah. Lloyd E. Shaw, '42 to Karma Camp ­ Lyle R. Porter, '38, and Laura Hansen 1909 -191 1 bell. Porter-July, Downe y, Idaho. Lizzie 0 . McKay Hill, '09 Kenneth Hampton , '42, of Illinois, to N. Dean Stephens, '38, and Fay House­ Salt Lake City, Utah Beth Stock. keeper Stephens-June, Salt Lake John Raymond Horton, '09 Annabelle Smith, '42, to Richard Hatch City, Utah. Wichita, Kansa s Bull en, '41. William D. Hurst , '38, and Emma Jo­ Robert L. Jud d, '09 Frances Rawlins, '42, to Ra y C. Ha yes . hanson Hurst-June 26, Manila, Salt Lake City, Utah Ruth Tyso n, '42, to Jex Leon Hiatt, '42. Utah. Edgar B. Brossar d, '11 • Dean B. Freeman., '42, to Florence Jen· Vern W. Seamons, '40, and Blanche Washington, D. C. sen, ex'43. Chatterton, ex-Aggie-June, Hyde Anna Nibley Bullen, '11 Lois Elizabeth Sargent, '43, to Aaron Roy­ Park, Utah. Salt Lake City, Utah lance. Madge Cannon Harwood, '39, and. Don A. C. Cooley, '11 Annora Eskelson, '43, to Vaughn Cordon, Harwood, '40- 0 ctober 30, Ogden, Utah. Washington, D. C. ex-Aggie. Don E. Hun t, '41, and Roine Fife Hunt­ Lucille Jensen Cooley, '11 November, Provo, Utah. Washington, D. C. Uriel J . Simmons, '39, and Bernice Westover Simmons-August, Boise , Idaho . 1912 Jean Han sen Stephenson, '41, and David Stout Jennings EDWARD'S Homer Stephenson, '41-0ctober 7, Logan , Utah Fillmore, Utah . Vere L. Martineau Lloyd F . Gunther, '39, and Metta Salt Lake City, Utah FURNITURE Christensen Gunther-October, Le­ Aa ron Newey hi, Utah . Logan, Utah LOGAN , UTAH LaVone Bott Nielsen, '40, and Wm. James George Osmond Durrell (Quig) Nielsen, '38-Sep­ Hartford , Connecticut tember 29, Brigham City, Utah . R. 0 . Porter Shirl ey Merrill Pitcher, '41, and Lynn Logan , Utah " Let Us 0 . Pitcher, '41- Nov ember, Ar imo, Idaho . 1913 Dean Frischknecht, '41, and Kathryn Edwin J ohn Holmgr en Feather Your Sorenson, ex-Aggie - September Garland, Utah 27, Logan, Utah. Phebe Nebeker Peterso n Nest " Marguerite Fonnesbeck Kleopfer, '37, Logan , Utah and Lynn W. Kleopfer, '35-0cto ­ Bert Lorin Richards ber 13, Sacramento, California. Logan, Utah Esther Webber Rust, '38, and Robert George Ste wart W. Rust- October , Logan, Utah . Ogden, Utah

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Claude E. Zobell, '27 1914-1915 1920-1923 La Jolla, California J. Kenneth Cannon, '14 Laura Parkinson Brossard, '20 LeRoy Dean Christensen , '28 Long Island, New York San Bernardino, California William E. Goodspeed, '14 Washington, D. C. Los Angeles, California Frank T. Hines, '20 Alden Lillywhite, '28 Gronway E. Parry, '14 Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C. Cedar City, Utah Johanna Moen, '20 Reynolds I. Nowell, '28 Prof. Charles J. Sorenson, '14 Logan, Utah Maplewood, New Jersey Logan, Utah George Q. Bateman, '21 Thelma Huber, '31 Frederick P. Champ, '15 Logan, Utah Cincinnati, Ohio Logan, Utah Dan Arthur Swenso n, '15 Douglas Cannon, '22 Logan, Utah Tremonton, Utah 1932-1935 Vernal Delroy Gardner, '22 Owen M. Despain, '32 1916 Logan, Utah Moab, Utah Tura M. Aldous Wilford D. Port er, '22 Effie Barrows Mays, '32 Tooele, Utah Logan , Utah Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Irvin T. Nelson Moroni West Smith, '22 John J. Barnard , '33 Murray, Utah Richfield , Utah Heber City, Utah Kathleen Bagley Nelson Frank 0. Fonnesbeck, '33 Murray, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Lowry Nelson 1924-1926 Alma Pratt, '34 Minneapolis, Minnesota Brigham City, Utah Lorin T. Oldroyd R. Stanto n Belnap , '24 John L. Heggie, '35 College, Alaska Boise, Idaho Clarkston, Utah William White Owens Alwyn Session, '24 Logan, Utah Watsonville, California Lloyd Rulon Hunsaker, '35 Junction, Utah Sey mour J. Quinney Walter U. Fuhriman, '25 Salt Lake City, Utah Pullman, Washington J. Fish Smith 1936-1941 Salt Lake City, Utah R. IL B;schoff, '26 Windsor, Colorado Donald E. Madsen, '36 Allie Petersen Burgoyne, '26 Salt Lake City, Utah 1917-1919 Logan, Utah Frances Winton Champ, '39 Walter James Crocker, '17 Logan, Utah Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Russell L. Maughan, '17 1927-1931 Ralph Hubbard Redford, '39 England Paris, Tennessee Je ssie Eccles Quinney, '17 Verena J. Adams, '27 Glen William Garlick ,'40 Logan, Utah Washington, D. C. Salt Lake City, Utah Da vid G. Hurren, '27 David Alvin Burgoyne, '19 Gayle Snow, '40 Logan, Utah Hyde Park, Utah Washington, ti. C. Winifred C. Smith Holton, '19 Vera Althea North , '27 Bertha Katharine Ebert, '41 Beaver City, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Ogden, Utah Page 19 ~o tbr Wbousanbsof Wtab~tatr ~lumnt Ur Ui~b !Joua 1!,appp1!,ohbap ~rason anb!)ears of cteontinurb~uccr~s

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