HAROLD E. STASSEN REUNION SPEAKER 21 0 MINNESOTA MINNESOTA
Continuing the Minnesota Alumni Weeldy which was estab IN THIS ISSUE- lished in 1901. Published monthly from October through April, and hi-monthly May-June and July-August, by the Minnesota Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Union, University of Minne sota, Minneapolis 14. Member of the American Alumni Council. Page EDITORIAL .. , .. 211 Vol. 49 April,1950 No.8 Have You Voted?
THOMAS C. BUXTON, '40Ex . Edilor LETTERS . 211 THE MINNESOTA' ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Edwin L. Haisle, . 31Ed Executive Secretary Executive Committee Alumni R elations Executive Staff RELIGION ON THE CAMPUS 212 Edwin L. Haislet '3 1 Ed . Director Arthur O. Lampland Tbomas C. BuxtOn '30BBA;'34LLB . ... Presiden, '40Ex MINNESOTA Harvey Nelson Vincent R. Reis '25Md First Vice Presideo, '41-'4 7Gr Field Represe ntative SCHOLARSHIP REVIEW, 1949-50 213 Rudolph Elstad Gerald Friedel! -19IT . .. Second Vice Presiden, '47 .. . . Membership Secretary Accomplishments of First Alumni Scholarship Mayoard Pirsig '25LLB .. Secretary James Morris '49IT Ulldergraduace Secretary Winners Mnulf Ueland '17 ... _ . Treasurer Eleanor Willi,s, Arthur R. Hustad '19Ex . . .. . Records D ivision ' 16 ...... Past Presideo, Ruby Robbins .. Mailing Division Mrs. Leo W. Fink '21Md Teresa Fitzgerald Edwin L. Haislet ' 18Ex ... Ollice Secretary GREATER UNIVERSITY FUND REPORT 215 List of 1949 Donors Board of D irectors Term e,,(>ir8J 19.50: Valdimar Bjornson '30; Ben M. Bros '23IT; MaIcia EdwaIds '3IMA;'35PhD; Rudolph Eisrad '19IT; Mrs. Leo W . Fink '21Md; Maynard E. Pirsig '25LLB; Charles Sommers '90. TUDENT LIFE AT MINNESOTA 223 T.,m 6,,(>ir6J 1951 ' Willi am Anderson ' 13; Arthur R. Hustad '16; Lawrence E. ( Duke) Johnson '29IT; Joho F. McGovern ' llLLB; Owen H . Wangensteen '22Md;'25PbD ; HaJold E. Wood '23; Wells J. Wrigh' '36LLB. MAA ELECTION BALLOT 224 Term e"pireJ 1 952: Theodore Cbrisrianson '37LLB; Mrs. H arold S. Eberhard, '31; Anhur O. Lampland '30BBA;'34LLB; Prancis L. (Pug) Second Printing to Be Sure You Vote Lund '35Ex; Harvey Nelson '25Md; John S. Pillsbury, Jr., '40LLB; Arnulf Ueland '17.
R6preI61J'aJ;1I ~J on Senate Commit"d on 1nIM,ollegial' Athletics: Roben Shay '24-27, and Don Lampland '39IT. Re(>reJensali". Of! Senate Com m;lIe. 0" Stud.", A/Ja;rJ: Mrs. Harold S. Eberbardt '31. RepreJ"'lali"e 1950 ALUMNI REUNION 225 0" U"iOf! Board 0/ GO"Br"orJ: Thomas Salmen '41. St",.ai"g Comm;lIe. Chairmen: A,hletics, Roben Shay '24-'27. Invesemenes, Arnulf Ueland '17. Detailed Program, Speaker, Committee on 'he Advisory Committee, George Leaby '23-'27. Calendar of Events Honorary Life Board Members PnJt PreJide"tJ: William F. Braascb 'O O;'03Md; George Earl '06;'09Md; Arthur R. Hustad ' 16; Charles F. Keyes '96;'99LLB; Ben W. Palmer ' U ;'13LLB;'14MA; Erling S. PlatOu '19;'21Md; Edgar F. Zelle '13. DISTRICT SCHOLARSHIP MEETING 228 Pail T,.aJurer: Thomas P. Wallace '93;·95LLB. Activity to Select 1950-51 Winners Honorary Life Association Members Dr. J . L. Morrill, President of 'he University; E. B. Pierce, former Director of Alumni Relations. THE ALUMNI CLUBS 230 GREATER UNIVERSITY FUND They're Booming; Four Pages of Chlb News Stanley J. Wenberg '4IEd;'47MA Fuod DirectOr
Boa rd of Trustees Alumni : Arthur R. HuStad '16, Chairman; Elmer E. Engelbert '20; MINNE OT A PROFILES 234 John K. Fesler '24, '26 LLB; Parker L. Sanders ' 18; Mrs. Arnulf Ue land '17. Universiry Adminisuation : President J . L. Morrill, Vice President William T . Middlebrook, Vice Presiden, Malcolm M. Willey. Pred B. PORT 235 Snyder 'SI, Ch.ICman of Board nf Regents. Edwin L. Haisle, '3 1Ed Board Secre,ary Ba eball Training Trip; Winter port
En[C~ red as second class matter at [he POSt office in Mioneapolis. Roundup Minn. under Act of Congress nf Marcb 3, 1879. Annual due. of tbe A ssoc ,~tion are S3 o f which $2 constitutes a year's ubsc ripcion to the MINNESOTA Subscription Inr nnn·members : $New York 11. N . Y.; phnne GRamercy 5-2039. 211 APRIL. 1950 LETTERS * To *Grearer Universicy Fund: Enclosed you will find my cbeck for che Greater Universicy Fund. orry ir couldn'r By EDWIN L. HAISLEY '31Ed be ren times the amOUD( for chis is tbe Director of Alumni Relations greatesr projecr the alumni ever undertook and I'm glad I had a parr in irs inceprion. fore power ro you. E. B. PIERCE Have You Voted? ELECTED IN ST. PAUL Theodore ChrislianJOn ' 3'B L&LlB. member of rhe MAA T'S ANNUAL eleerion time for all members of the MinnesOta Alumni board of direcrors, Association. To be able to vote for those you want to direct the activities I and two other Minne of your aSSoCIatiOn is a privilege and a dury. There was a time in the affairs ota alumni, Thom.as of the association when the criticism was leveled that because only life ( 50) F. Ellerbe 1913-15, members could vote, it was a closed corporation. Now the constitution calls and Carl A. BralIJober for the election of 21 Board of DirectOrs members-seven to be elected an 191 - -I , are among ually for three years by ballot appearing in the alumni publication. 10 men newly elected ro the board of direc to This year in order that you would have ample opportuniry study the rors of the ~ [. Paul nominees, the list of candidates and their accomplishments was printed in the A sociation of Com March issue of the magazine (pages 187-188) as well as a ballOt (page 189). merce. They will take The ballot i~ again printed in this issue of MINNE OTA-Voice of the office April 12 ar rbe Christian,on Alumni, 0 that if you didn't vote last month, you will be reminded to vote now. association's aD n u a 1 dinner. The board has 33 member . The nominees were carefully cho en by a nominating committee named by President Lampland. They met several times and deliberated carefully on each name selected-and with every effort being made to maintain balance on UNIVERSITY CENTER FOR the board in respect to graduating class, college and sex. CONTINUATION STUDY Last year, I'm ashamed to admit, only 1 % of the membership ored for the directOrs, with the majoriry of vores coming from our alumni outside the state of Minnesota. ertainly we have a much more interested and a participat April 17- 19-Gynecologr, for general phr sicians ing group than that 100 indicates. In faer, the accelerated alumni program ha been possible only because of the real interest and participation of our alumni April 20·22- rdio ascular Diseases, for general phy ician throughout the state and nation. The re pon e to the new program ha been Apnl 21-22-Centennial Insritute of peech most enthusia tic-indicating that our alumni are anxious to take part In Corre tion alum ni affairs. April 2..j·~ < - ral urger), Therefore, if you are an MAA member and haven't voted, rum to page April 24-~ - ral Diagno i 124 before y u forget. Mark the ballot with seven name of your cl10ice, clip pril _ -25- tOry Telling In nture and mail to my office. Do ;1 /lOU'. A an aerive member of the Minne ora Ahmni Association your greatest responsibility i to vote for the direeror . April 26-T -Mental Health for Pro bare Judges Take part in tRe management of the as ciation by voting /lOU'. Aprd 28·29- hool Health for chool Health Director April 29- urslng dmlOistrame Prob- NEW LIFE MEMBERS lem far 1- 5- ooperanve fanagement em- Gerold H. )'rovy' 1MechE, Richland, Wa h. Inar George R. cot! 19 0- , Minneapoli fay 11 -13- emlnar in nglneerlng ·du· J. T . Kiharo '48DD , P catello, Idaho larion lay 11 - 13-Eye, Ear. ose, and Throar, ew 411IlUol members ( not rene al ) f r ,t::eneral phr IClans Feb. 16 to March 17, 1950 1 Mar 15-16- lateraal and Infant Health for ew anllual lIIembers ( not rene al ) HospItal ur ing ' taff ince ct. 1 1949 1,_9 far 1-- aneer. for Denti t Total MAA member hip a of March 17 1 ,156 ?-!ay IH-20-lndu UI.ll ur 109
Mal' 1H - ~O - Llbrar) 1n mut 212 MINNESOTA
~~ (Ut~~et4 T wo N ew Members On Scholarship Committee Two public school executives who Protestant Youth Active also are MinnesOta alumni, have been added ro the University SCholarship Episcop alian Presbyterian Congregational Committee, making it an eight-man body for the final selection of 90 per This is the fifth in a series of articles on the 22 religiolls organizations sons ro receive MinnesOta Alumni acth'e on tbe University's Twin Cities campttSes, Freshman Scholarships and Josephine L Merriam Scholarships. By LUCILLE HARMEL They are Ralph W, Begstrom '40- Dan forth Graduate Fellow MA, of Hutchinson, president of the Minnesota Association of Secondary EPISCOP ALlAN Curtis Wilson is student president, School Principals, and James K , the Rev. James Boren, direcror, and i"ritchie '36MA, of Hibbing, president PISCOP AllAN students at the Mrs. Doris Anderson, associa ~ e di of the MinnesOta Council of School University of MinnesOta have the E rector. Executives. They were added after the opportunity for worship, instruCtion, committee was designated for selec giving, service, and inter-faith cooper tion of the Merriam scholarship win ation at St. Timothy's House, and Holy CONGREGATIONAL ners, as well as the alumni sponsored Trinity Church, 317 Seventeenth Ave, freshman scholarships. S.E., Minneapolis. Canterbury Club, Congregational students gather on The Others of the committee are: Episcopal student organization, ha; the third floor of the University Bap Morris Bye '40MA, chairman; T. ]. regular weekly meetings with dinner tist Church at 1219 University Ave. Bertling '27Ed; '32MA, and Clifford and a program or discussion. .E., for weekday and quarterly activ ommer '32BusA, representing the There is participation in Sunday ities in Pilgrim Foundation. unday MAA, and Deans H , T. Morse '28BA; seminars on beliefs of an Episcopalian programs are held at the First Congre '3 0MA;'39PhD, R , E. Summers, and and in parish activities. Student serve gational Church, Fifth t. and Eighth E, G. Williamson '31PhD, represent as organists, Sunday School teachers, Ave. S.E. During a series of three Sun ing the University. and vestrymen in the church and there day evening discussions on "The is an annual marriage course. hurch-Spelled with Three F's" the DorOthy Menefee is student presi students considered fellowsh ip, free dent, the Rev. George R. Metcalf, dom, and faith. Minnesota Continues chaplain; and Miss Kate A. Bradley, Other activities of Pilgrim Founda Opposition to R ose Bowl direcror of the Episcopal student pro· tion are Bible study, a weekly open Minnesota will continue ro lead the gram. house, special projects such a the light against the Rose Bowl pact be Ruth Seabury Scholarship fund for tween the Pacific oast onference Japanese students, athletics, parties, and the Big Ten, Dr. J. L Morrill, P R ESBYTERIAN summer caravans, state and national president of the University, said in conferences, dramatics, and quarterly The University Westminster Fellow Pittsburgh while there to address the all-foundation meetings for Congre ship, which is a part of the West Mi nnesota Alumni lub in February. gati na l students in the Twin meso minster F undation of Minne ota lo He was interviewed by the Pitt burgh John Longley is srudent president, cated at 1628 Fourth t. S,E., spons rs Press. a program for Pre byterian students and the Rev. Kenneth Wade Dr. Morrill said the Big Ten dam on the Minneapolis campus. Students direcror. aged it elf when it signed the Rose lead study groups, worship, and prayer Bowl pact and thereby aband ned its fellowship. lasses, seminars, recrea stand against post-season game . The tion, forums, and discussions are also pa t adds ro the pressure ro win at any on the weekday and unday program. T. PAUL CAMPUS cost, he said, These students started a nation-wide campaign when they sponsored a drive On the St. Paul campu , the Presby for Bo ks for Bookies Un iversities. terian- ongregational Fellowship meets R est' arch Fellowsh ip s: Dr. Mal The books coll ected by the group were at r. Anthony Park ongregati nal colm M, Willey, academic vice presi ent ro the University of Nanking hurch ro serve b th the Presbyterian dent of the University, ha be n Groups within the Westminster Fel and ongregational students. The Stu appointed to a new committee on lowship are the married couples' club, dent president is Herbert Moline, and facu lty resear h fellowships of the a ommuters' group, men's club, and Miss Frances ooper is adviser. The ocial Science Research oun it. The Phi hi Delta, a Presbyterian women's Rev. Donald ioclair i mini ter at t. uncil has a grant of 65,000 for r - organ ization. Anthony Park ongregational hurch. ear h fe ll o~ ship for live years. MINNESOTA VOICE OF THE ALUMNI Vol. 49 No.8 APRIL, 1950
S~ 7 The Minnesota young people who, through generosity of contributors to help pay their way. to the Greater Unit'ersity Fund, were awarded Minnesota Alumni Freshman The scholarships, which were Scholarships for 1949-50, have noUl had time to find themselves and shaUl gramed to 40 outstanding high school of what stt/If they are made. T hey are the first group of freshman scholars seniors last spring, provide up to a enrolled IInder the alumni sponsored program. For a condensed showing of what they have accomplished, read the following: maximum of 500 for their first year of college. BJI JIM MORRIS '49fr That is ollly two hundreds of a point The selection of the students was M A A U ndergraduate Secretary short of a straight "B" al'erage for the made according to admissions eligibil fall quarter. INNERS of Minnesota Alumni ity, academic aptitude, leadership, W Freshman scholarships for the They also have bf'en active in extra charaaec, vocational promise, and fi coll ege year 1949-50, recorded the ex cu rricular projects of benefit to them nancial need by an alumni-faculty cellent grade average of 1.98 for the selves and the University and in jobs seleCtion commirree. The srudems fall quarter. Three of 1949-50 Scholat'ship Students RALPH S. TILLITT 19, graduate of MARJORIE E. JAMIESON 19, SLA ROYAL C . HAYDEN 18, a g radu ate of Techn ical High School, St. Cloud, 1949. with a major in speech or Eng li sh. A Albe rt Le a Hig h School. Major in p re In high school, was sporh editor of the graduate of South H igh School in Minn e apolis. Editor of the South Hi Southerner; med ic ine. Me mber of the Freshman Techo es, co-capta' n of the track team, graduated third in a class of 365. Chair choru s presid e nt; received an "A" rating , C a binet and the All- Un iversity C ongress ma n of the Mi nneapolis Junior Tow n soloi st state music contest, and presi dent Meeting in 1948. Since starting the Un i concert committee. Pa rtici pated in intra of t he W est",inster Fe llowsh ip. MDj or in vers ity, Marjorie has spe nt most of her mural b asketball wi th t he '4gers, and works psychology d t he Un iversity a nd received ti me worki ng at a drugstore flower d e a grade average of 2.43 for fall quarter. partme nt and with Orchesis, Un iv ersity in C offma n Un ion. Had a fall g rade aver Spe nt the past summe r as a Forest Ranger mode rn dance group. Sh e h~ d a 2.7 [" 8" ) age of 3. 0, straight " A". in the Idaho forests. averag e for the fa ll. 214 MINNESOTA selected were from all over the state A MESSAGE of Minnesota and were carefully New York Alumni Club screened. To Of the 40 winners, only 35 re Gives $500 to Fund mained enrolled throughout the first THE ALUMNI quarter. Three students cancelled out The Minnesota Alumni Club at mid-term for financial reasons and of New York City on Feb. 25 From twO because of accidents and ill health. made a club gift of $500 to the Arthur R . Hustad '1 6BA In the total group of 35, there were 18 Greater University Fund. The Chairman, Board of Trustees freshman with a "B" or better grade gift was unrestricted, the club Greater Universiry Fund including three who attained a straight "A." According to Ellsworth setting no requiremenr as to the During 1949, alumni suPPOrt of the Gerritz, admission supervisor, this purpose for which the money Greater University Fund showed grade average is excellent and consid shall be used. splend id progress. The number of con erably above the grade level of the tributors increased almost 100% over average freshman. the previous year. The amount of The scholarships were made avail money contributed by alumni increased able through unrestricted gifts during almost 200%. the 1948 campaign of the Greater It is a thrilling experience for those University Fund. Plans are now bein~ of us alumni who are close ro the de tudied for extending the same schol velopment of this program ro watch it arship program to include students snowball in this way. from throughom the United States. I have been amazed at the great number of projects that could be un dertaken by the Fund if money were Students in Campus available. Our programs of aids to students, through both scholarships and fellowships, have received a mag Groups and Hold Jobs nificent reception by our alumni and a grateful reception by the University The 35 students combined have staff. Both programs seek ro meet a membership in over 100 campus or desperate need. community organizations from church The Fund's support of research pro choirs to athletics and campus politics. jects has likewise met with acclaim Two of them are members of the from the University staff and has re fre hman cabinet, governing board or ceived enthusiastic suppOrt from our the freshman cla s; most of tbem have Morris Bye alumni. jobs that occupy from twO to 35 hours AU of this expresses a real sense of of their time per week, in addition to Morris Bye '40MA, is chairman of the pride and a sense of responsibility on their carrying a full class load in the part of our alumni. We do owe University Scholarship Committee which chool. orne of the girls baby-sit, our alma mater a real debt. The edu made the final selection of the students others work in campus drugstOres. cational experience she afforded u now attending the University on Minne The boys engaged in intramural sports has helped all of us to attain whatever sota Alumni Freshman Scholarships. during the fall and winter months and we have or to wherever we are tOday. spent their working hours in gas sta In that respect every taxpayer in the tions, setting pins in the Coffman Un tate of Minnesota invested in us. We, ion bowling alley, or waiting tables in each of them hurdle the first few therefore, ha e a special, an extra obli dormitOries or fraternity houses. There months of adjustment ro college life. gation ro pay a dividend-wharever are twO students who drive over 30 It has made it possible for the student each of us can pay each year. mile to chool each day. ro engage in a few extra-curricular The scholarship students' majors in activities whereas, had he been on his school vary from journalism to social own, hi working hours would have Minn. Engineers' Bod work and engineering. Over half of left him little or no time to mingle them are enrolled in professional and associate with fellow students. Elects Bodien Pre ident courses. The e young people are indeed grate At its annual meeting in Mioneapoli It was the concensus of opinion of ful for the opportunity t go ro college [he Mione om Association of Professional the tudents that had it not been pos and they all offer ro Minnesota alwl1ni Engineers elec[ed as its new pre ideo[ Gordoll Bodiw. who graduated from the and other contributors to the fund sible for them to recei e their scholar University ,i[h dis[ioction in civil en~i hips, they would ha e been unable ro their appre iati n and thanks for mak neering in 19 2. Mrs. Bod/ell is the former attend college. The cholarship helped ing it p sible. heffe Marx '32 IncAr h. APRIL, 1950 215 UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA, SPRING QUARTER, 1950 DONORS TO GREATER UNIVERSITY FUND DOUBLED IN SECOND YEAR Class of 1881 McGregor. Gertrude Jewert order. Fred B. There were 2,200 contributOrs to me Greater Univers (r.'IrS. Ernest F.) ity Fund in 1949, its second year of operation, as compared Iyers. Eleanor heldon with 1,180 in 1948. (Mrs. Dean '\ .) Class of 1883 ewhall, . L unn. Janet Pierce, E. B . Pinkham, Harriet Jeffer. 'II arceo, Alice A. Rock Son well ( 'IrS. Frank M .l (Mrs. L. H . ) Gray. Claude F. Class of 1896 Class of 1899 'II ilkins. Laura Gould Johnston. frances (Mr . John . ) Abernelhy. William . Condil. W·. H . Libby, Harry C. Class of 1887 Austin. Ella May Fancher. Clemma Buck McGregor. Elizabeth Graha.m , Christopher Blaisdell. Helen E. (Mrs. Frederick) Perry, Gale'll . Chamberlin. herman R . Gray. Helen Moody Richard on. Harold J . Class of 1905 Dalrymple. John . (Mrs. Iyde E. ) Rodgers. "alter . Class of 1889 Eriksoo. Heory A. (47) Hall. arah P. avage. F. J. Abbotl. Joho . Flynn, Edward F. Hummel. John A . weiner. . E. ( l) Alden. h rles H . Bese, arah Fogalty, Charles W. (l) Jerome, Eva arde on Truscott. J . R . ( l ) Couocryman. Gratia A . alboun. Allan B. Gruenberg, Benjamin C. (Mrs. has. '\ . ) Conwar . Estelle Hempstead. Clark trarhern. Fred P. Eioa.rsson, [urla Thomas. Alice A. Class of 1890 Kirtland. Rhodelia Clas of 1902 Frar) , Fraocis C. Leonard. George B. (' ) 'II hitman. tella Grar Gearing, Maud P. Douglas. George P. McDaniel. Orianna (1) (Mrs. Edward A . ) Brand. Chariest Gerrish, H nrry E. Gummcr, Edgerton F. Myers. D . \Vi. Burns, Harvey L. Gillene. Geo. L. ommers, hades L. Picken. Vicror G. Class of 1900 Canoon. Bernice M. Hard . ig ( 2 ) Fi h , Helen R .* ( 8 ) iegler. Lilian A . Appleb)'. lephen C. M . HarSh. George " . ( 2 ) impson, 1vlarcus J. Beardsle) . RIChard Fraser, Robert L. Hiscoe\... Jenn,e L Class of 1891 Braasch. 'II . F. Halvor on, Oiai Le Tourneau. E. H . Polk. Grace E. Merrill, John E. Guilford. Paul Willis Lo)e. Heorr E. Class of 1897 Houleon. am R. LlOk:6eld. lice E. Harding. Gertrude Gould Houston. Lila b'larchard Lynde, Roy Class of 1892 (Mrs. Henry H . ) (Mrs. John L.) Class of 1903 {orgao. George Belden. George K. (2) Hunt. '\ aller E. Benedicl. George F. Pearce. , . O. lass Gifl - 25 .00 Buck, Carroll D . (I) Jack on. Raymond Freeman. Edward (2 ) Penno k. Loi T ennaot Friedlander. Esther Burch, Frank E. ( 4 7) Jewett. F. G. Lyon. 'laude Fletcher ( MrS. Edward ) Rose. Florence J. Christenson, ellic Grant Jorgens. Ann. Quedi (Mrs. Harold L. ) Rank. Minnie L. Wilson, Halsey '\ 01. (4) (Mrs.. R.) (Mrs. Joseph 0 . ) McMillan. P . D . ogse, L. L Hanrl, Hugo O. Kin ell. 'II illi.m L. Rask. Louis wenson. Elfrida !\f. Poerer . la.cion E. Lyon. Harold L. rickelberger. josephJne Tuoh) . E L. (I) Class of 1893 Putnam. 'II . R . Morley. Frank J . Lind [com \\7e i haar. Charles H Wadsworth. Helen 01 on. Charles'll . Bell. RUlh Harm (4 7 ) (!\frs. R. " .) (Mrs. John E. ) 'II oodman Pillsbur) , John . Cooley. Martha M . frs. Robert) candrett. H . WC Class of 1907 Crogan, Matrie Marie rilchcu, Aileen Belyea BalaDo, Dora Moulton Dor.ey, J ames E. (Mrs. Edward F.) (Mrs. Fred B.) Elwell, Edwin . Erdall, Arthur Bell, M . Dwight Farnam, H . E. Giltinan. David M . Bjorge, Oscar B . George, J . M . (2) H agen, igurd Cownie, Frieda L. Stamm Haine., Helen B. H ammond, L. D . (Mrs. Doug!as) Holen, O.car M. Hansen, Erling W . (I) Griggs, Richard L. Koenig, Mrs. Clara H . Johnson, R euben A. (1) Hills, Minnie L. Miller, H. E. Lang. W . B. Phillips. Ethel Rockwood Nason, George L. Lee, Marjorie W . (Mrs. Tilden F.) Pettijohn, Lyle (2) Lewi •. Alice G. Quist, Henry W. Quigley, James L. Litzenberg, Olga (1) Reed, Fred B. Rowe. Ina B. Mor.e. Frank E. Wilk, J acob* (47) COtt, Esther M . Robbins Mulrean, Theresa Woodward, Herbert S. (35 ) Odland. H enf)' (I) (Mrs. W . W . ) Olsen, Leslie R . Class of 1908 kytte, Ernest E. Orr. G . M. Bachrach, Alfred mlth. L . G. POInter, Carl W . Bandelin, . J . (2) Strane, A . J. (2) Ramsing, F. C. Dougan, Henry K . Upson, R . H . Robertson. A ' bert J . Dougan, Faith M . Wheat· Wieland, Walter F. Rogers, Vera mollet on (Mrs. Ralph W . ) (Mrs. H . K . ) Class of 1911 cofield, R . J . Fcuen. Anhur B. Alseth, Ida Brooks ,schoo Paul Ga[es, assi us E. (Mrs. Charles) Thorn, Lewis W . Hoaas, Ole G . Barr, J ean B. Zelle, Lillian ipp esbiu, Hazel Herrick "A round of cheers <0 'he old grads 01 'he niversity Beedez, G . (I) Green6eld, Elsie Learned (Mrs. Robert J.) of Minnesota who are contributing (0 a Greater Unj· BiecruID , cella Glasser (Mrs. Alfred M . ) ordln. Gustaf T . (1) versiry Fund," Gustafson, R. • (2) Paske. . H. (MrS. William J.) PeterSon, Jay B. Thief River Falls Times Borak, Arthur Hansen, Olga Wold (Mrs. Han,) Poole, Arthur B. Borg, Joseph F. (1 ) Hermanson, P . E. (I ) haplro, M . J . (I) Bouma, Lewis R . ( 4 8) irich, Edward H . (I) Jackson, Irene Fraser Bros, Ben M . (2) weatt, Charles B. Murphy, Edward J. (Mrs. Raymond A.) weetmao, Edwin A . Class of 1920 Christophersoo, jessje ett, Charles V. Howe Jacobson, Frank H . ( 10) Tanner, Ches ~ ethe rby. Eu o ice Hilbe rt ~ h itman . \'(Iin ifred G . Finley. R ay mond J . ( ) L.mpla nd. A . O . Giv ing, G . R . 0) (1) G eerken. Edirh A nderson Lacson. Lesler E. ( 1) H a ig h. Mar ion E. ( M rs . M acn id. r ) Y lv isaker. R . . ( I ) ( Mrs. forreS[ K .) Lindgren. D avid L. H a nna. John P. W o hl rabe. E. J . ( l ) oldma n. Theod o re l. Lynch. Fra n is "\'(1 .* ( I ) H a nover . R . D . ( I ) Golembesk i. A g nes Me lby .. M . H a rh aw ay. . R . CIas of 1928 M o rell Meyer. Rudo lph F. CI a of 1926 ( Mrs. tephe n J .) Morris. R . E. H ed in . D agma r M . ( A nderson. Leslie P . ( I ) Guyor. Ed irh L. Murphy. Alice M . Ko pp. R aymo nd J . A ltendo rf. Ed ward L. Baumgo rten, Beath a A. H a nsen. Cy rus Owen ( I ) N e lson. . Barton ( I ) LaDue. John . ( I ) N ova k. Milan Bakken. Oliver P . Be rn stein, \Xl ill ia m H a rrell. Margaret K eeler Lindgren. R . C. ( I ) Berkheime r. Effie B. Blosjo. H erbe rt H . ( Mrs. E. Graham ) Oppen. E. G . ( I ) Blo mgren . Berna rd O . Branten. A rthur M . H aske ll . M iller Perki ns. J a mes E. l\1' :l(suyama. a[o ru (3) Breiseth , Norro n M . Hoeglund. Joan Johnson Recker. Lo rra i ne ( ) M iller. W .. Ditm ore, D avid Brooks. Ol ive (Mrs. K . C.) Sandlein . Robert \'(1. ewma n. E. W .• ( I ) Ed ler . F. T . choch, _M"ae Zehnder Carleton. Ma ry E. Howe r Mitchell, Clara C. McDonald, T . L. Pearson, Malcolm M . (I) Class of 19 0 Class of 1935 Moormann. Joseph A . McManus, C. E. Pennock. G . T . Pennock, Elizabeth Hull' Mueller, Herman J . Allin, Vjnceo[ Mem't, W. A . (I) Aldrich. Herrick (I) J. gren elson, Cecilia liller, am (I) Allison, John H . Baker, Emil P . (Mrs. G . T . ) Olsoo, Robert . ville, Philip (2) Brown, Wesley R .* (2) BalJour. " illiacn (1) Rasmussen, ~ aldemar C. Paulson. Adeline V . Oen. Roy J . (2) Burdick. Eugene A. Beck. C. George (1 ) Ralph. James R. (1) Parker, David M . (1) Cohen. Arnold A. Behr, E. A . Risch, R . E. (I) Rigos, Fraok J . (I ) Bell, Thomas G . ( 1) Pa kewltz. Lena R . ( .. 6) Davis. Jess,e Allen cheie, Harold G . (I) Rud, Jennie M . Berzner, R , O . P e ter~on. lace nee R . (Mrs. G . E. ) kjei. Larr), J . ( ) everson. A. 111. Biorn, orman E. Peterson. Edwin W . ibley, Mulford Q . Prestegaard. Doris Kretz- FI)'nn. J. E. * (1) mith, B. Willis (2) Borcbert, John R . Frane, Donald B. (I) ,effen. Winifred Garrarc schmar pace, Margaret (2 7 ) Brearlel . harles .• Jr. Goldblum. Ardelle Broch· (Mrs. Harold J .) ( Mrs. Paul G . ) Titrud, Leonard A. ( I) Brucciani, Fred L. in Villaume, LouIS R .. Jr. Vadheim. James L. (1 ) Bruhn. eenon (2 ) Putnam, K '''herine E. (i) (MrS. K . B ,) Von Eschen, G . L. righrson, H , L * (2) Buhl, Aage O . Robinson, Brad .• Jr. Golds Van Dalson. Doris Dahl· uodberg, R. Dorothy strom Swanson, Ruth E. (47) (Mrs. J oh n C.) GREATER UNIVERSITY FUND Thomas. Agnes M . Vao Every. Harold (2) Van D emark. R o berr E. Wallace. Ray H . (2) 1949 REPORT OF INCOME ( 1) Wolfeoson. Sidney J . Van D e Rice. Harry J . Warburton. Anne Unrestricted gifts 19,682.71 Woodbury. J . R . Class of 1941 Zingsheinl. J ohn Gifts to the Greater University Fund for specific Ahlstrand. Helen Passi (Mrs. Roy) projects Class of 1944 A llison. Helen M. B. 42,554.32 Anderson, Marvin E. (47) Gifts to new University trUSt funds or to existing trust Adams. Crystal Baack. Rudie E. Anderson. George E. Basom. WI. ompere Barron. R ose Flor Berner, Lester M . funds channeled through the Greater University (Mrs. Fred E.) Booren. A . M . Berde, r rene S. Boyle. Rena ( 6) Fund 24,716. 15 Brown. Melvin J . Berg. Byron A. Clark. Barbara M .* (25) Total 6,953.18 Brown, Francis WI. Dinesen. H . L. Carver, Maurice R . Eliason. E. B .. Jr. Carver. Erma Hoglund Farmer, Beatrice Fei ken 1949 REPORT OF EXPENDITURES ( Mrs. Maurice R.) ( 6) (Mrs. Herbert E. ) Cranslon. Elizabeth Mor· rison (1) Fossum. Kyle K . Allocated to Minnesota Alumni Scholarships 10,000.00 (Mrs. Robert W . ) Fu t. Frank J . (2) ovey. K . W . Gisvold. Marvin \V . Allocated to Greater U niversity Fellowships 4,500.00 Glock. Robert \V . Cress, Mrs, Marrha Rais· Hanson, Marjorie Jo hnson All ocated to Greater U niversity Graduate Research 5,000.00 a nen (46) (Mrs. A . R . ) Dodds, William Harder. Theresa Assigned to specific trust fund named by donor 67,187.97 Eastm an. Nora E. Harringeon. Rueh (46) Engdahl, Richard E. Hedman. Toivo E. Unassig ned balance 265.21 Holmquist. D . E. Erickson, Winifred How. a rd Hurwitz. M . M. ( I ) Total 86,953.18 (Mrs. Ii. E. ) Johnsen. Wesley E. Fairbanks. Ea rl R . Johnson. ha rles R . Johnson. Ma ry Baker F leming, Robert E. yrovy. Gerald H . McCollom, John S. (2) (M rs. harles R.) Hildesrad. Harold L. Ford. Mary Ca th erine Toll efson, Diana Bowen McCune. George H . Johnson. Roy A. Hoover, Kerwin F. (Mrs. Verno n T . ) Frykma n. J ean M . Jung. Viceor F. McIncosh, J ean Wagner, Edmund G. Nesse, Gerhard M. (1) J ngraham , J . . Gee, Harold \V. Kalton. Robert R . (47) Nielsen, H arold P . Johnsoo, Harry G. Kivi. Elsie K . Groth. H elen Rachie Weber. L. Ja ne Peterson. Margery E. Kirschbaum. Arthur (1) ( Mrs. Norman E.) Kocnkc r. Robert H . \'(feir. T heodore S. Schoon. D oris Johnson Knutson, Eugene S. Kohn. H oward M . Weisman, Sydney J . ( 1 ) ( Mrs. \'(farren E.) Hamilton. Byron K. Krogslund. Doro eh y \'(fenberg, Sta nley J . eangl. P . E. (1) Larsen, R . A . Hill. L. W .. Jr. (4) Weaver Wesr. J ames R . ( I ) Stowe, Bess Larson. K enneth R . (1) Hoganson, Dona ld K . (Mrs. Nelson B. ) Wood, Earl H . (1) Sucor, Alois T . Levenson, D anjel Johnson, Harriet C. Krueger. Frederick W . Scorik. M . Eleanor Zup· Lawrence. D ur ie l Adams pann Linehan. Helen Biske Korda. Annabella Erick· ( Mrs. Jean Paul) Class> of 1942 (Mrs. George J . ) (46) On Lazarerri. Marga rcr Pugh Tomhave. WeSley G. (Mrs. John P . ) (M rs. Lawren e L.) ( Mrs. R ay P.) Adler, John W . Virnig, Richard P. ( I ) McRae, Phyllis Drake Kozlik, Roberr F. L 'C, Avonella m irh Akenson. urtis B. Walker. George l. ( 1) (Mrs. O. Brene ) Koch, Richard C. (Mrs. John T . ) Anderson, acol M . Weed. M. Jrene (46) Mees. J ane K . La ngpap . Howard Lillenns. Arthur Westeen, Richard \'(f. Ba ngs. Eugene E. M e ister. H elen B. Lyons. Doralynn Macey Berdie. R a lph P. \'(food. Jrene H . Langp.p. Carherine Pa lm· (Mrs. Edward F. ) arlson. C. Lawrence Miller, June er Marshall. Doug!as B. Carlson. Elaine R o rh (27 ) Nash, Russell W . (Mrs. Howard .) McRae. D . D . ( Mrs. D ean \V.) Class of 1943 Nelson. Bernice A. (1) Marsen. Louise ( ) Mellin. Robert A. Cha rney, Rudolph J . Nelson, Berne" e G. (1) Moses, Leo F. Anron. Joseph P. Montgomery. Louise oe. Myrtle Hodgkin. Mudgett, Roxie T . (1) Schaale ( 6) Bentley, Kath e rine Sire Neuenschwander, H . L. ( Mrs. Robert ) (Mrs. John J. ) ( Mrs. Theodore H . ) ( I ) Murray, Nelson A. Braman, Edwin Pa tterson, R . B. ( I ) Murrell. ha rles M . ecr. Don L. o nner, ~ illiam J. Brandr. Evel)'n Nelson. laYlo n E. J . (1) Dam.krager. Genevieve Roa h, Francis X . Nyberg, Myrrle L. Bri sey, P aul E. ( 7) Nissen, M)lcna Eberley, T . S. ( 1 ) Rondestvedr. C. ., J r. P eck. Verne A . (2) ordbye. Ri hard A. Brownlee, Mrs. I'Jelen F inelli. Jo cph A . Harti adofT, Me lvin Perl, M artin F ische r. Robert W . (2) Parsons. . A. ori son, Agnes H . Green. Robert A . (1) Paccridge. J . G. Carlson, H elen J . Pengilly. R icha rd L. He ll er, Ben 1. (1) hapma n, Ali e Riley Sma ll or la rge memorial gifts-of almost any Si2C Peterson. Henning L. Hilker, M . D . ( I ) (M r . Gerard) ca n be contributed to vital research programs in Cancer, Ingraham . Vjrginia Pick· Perrich, Fred (2) D e lmore, R o ber< J . ( 1) heart , or almOSt any other field of medical research Pettitt. Margaree E. ert Eckardt, Nancy Berkman Ihrollgb /be Greale,. Ulliversil'Y Flllld. ( Mrs. J .. ) Potthoff. F lore n e lark (Mr. Burnell) (Mrs. William F.) J acobson, Elcon J . Erlandson, M. Julia n Proff, Harold P ." ( 1) J acoby, J ay J . ( I ) F"rkas, Eleanor Duer a nd berg. M arjorie Knud· Pressman. H arold A. Johnson, Charles E. Ringer, ha rle Judd (2) ( Mrs. John V. ) son Rice. Roberta G. ( 1) Rood. Doroth Atkinson" Jones. Lowell F. ( 7) Grohnnl, Arthur E. (Mr . Donald ) chilling. Louise Kranst· ( ) Karlson. Alfred . (I) Grobe. Mrs. Willirun B. chne ll . Evelyn Gottfried over (Mr•. John ) Kin tlcr, Ann Zje~ k e G roga n, John M . ( 1) (Mr •. Ervin .) (Mrs. M .. ) (Mrs. Paul L.) churnke, John F. Groll, Kenneth R . choon. \'(fa rren E. chmid<. Anna A. cherven. Betty Jane Knighr. Borba ra (8) H a llin. R . P. choonover, Hownrd D. Kubi ck. William G. (1) Hanson, Glenn G. everson, Ralph L. chrooder. Albert J . (I) c1ater. Ali e M . Lund, Robert 'I . H e ise. Paul (I) pecht. Oscar G .. Jr. chunk. Adc line S. ( ) e lvig. Effi e A. Ma Do"old, Stuart '. (2) H ennon, E1izabelh Hand· aker pre itcr. John R . chwyzer. Arnold G. (1) mith. Crt rude Mann, Fronk D . ( 1) mith, Lc lie Marrin, William B. ( 1) (Mrs. William J .) Scude. Ruch A. ( ) COH, Ann APRIL, 1950 221 By aCtion of 'he Boa rd of Truscees of 'he Greater Ireland. L. H . Buck. John T . ipkJos. Willtam University fund 'he scholarship program supporred Joel. Mildred Bulmer, Donald A. kaar. Dolores from unrestricted receipts of (he Fund hereafter will Johnson, Bob Burrows, illiam ( I ) Speriiog, Rosalie be known as "The Minnesota Alumni cholarship" Johnson. Richard . ( I ) Burler. ally Lee ,ein. June B. program. Joseph. Earl C. Champion. Joan E. ,evenson, Jean L. Koester. Mary L. Chri5 Elliot, R . M. (5) Lind, Gustaf L. Sikes, Madeleine Wallin ummecs , R. E. \Vlalker. Mrs. Gilbert M. Elsoo, William (I) Lind, amuel C. ( 1 ) (Mrs. George) Epsreio, Srephan (I) Tare, John T . (I) ( I) Lindsren, Gortfrid ( ) Teeter. Thomas A. H. Erikson, Henry A . (47) imon. Weener (1) \Vlal,ers, Mrs. Arrhur L. Lundeen. Dale J . ( 1) (I) Evans, G . T. (I) Siqveland, Th. Warsen. Marion E. ( I) Mahler. A. A. (1) Thompsnn. Julia Blossom Finnegan, Josephine A. melko. Ameilia (41) \Vlebber, Margaret MarShall, Julia (43) Vaile, Genrude Ford, Guy Sranton (4) Smirh, Lee Irvio (I) (Mrs. C. C. ) * May. Charles W .* ( 1) Vaile. Roland (I) Frederiksen, Felix M . need, M . C. ( I ) Wells, A. H . (I) May. Mrs. Charles \VI. Van D emark, Guy E. (1) (39) Spilhaus, A. F. Wells. l. J . (I) McCauli. R. N . (6) Spink. Wesle)' (1) Van D emark, Walrer E. Willey. Malcolm M. Gaske. W. H. McCnrmick. Frank G. (I) Sranford. Edward B. (4) Williamson. H . A. (I) Gillespie, James B . ( 1) ( 2 ) Van Dalson, John . Sreefel, Lawrence D . ( ) \"q ine, David B. Glabe, Mrs. Gordon R . Van Honk, Kennerh J . McDiarmid. E. W .* (4) rehman. J . Warren ( I ) Wrenn. C. Gilbert Goodrich, W . M . (2) (4 1 ) McDonald. Mrs. Guy F. Srenstrom. K . Wilhelm Zillgirr. Julius A. Grainger, Margarer (46) \Vlagner, George (6) (36) ( I ) Anonymous (19) Grour, Rurh E.* (1) \Vla lker, Mrs. Archie D. McDonald, Mrs. Laura C. Anonymous (47 ) Hall, G. H . (1) Sreube, R . W. (I) (I) McKelvey, John L. 6 Anonymous Gifts Hammond J . Felron (1) McKinley, C. A. (1) Hansen, H . C. (2) McQuarrie. Irvine * (I) Hanson. Heleo (46) Middlebrook, \VI. T . ORGANIZA TIONS, FIRMS, AND FOUNDATIONS Hanson, Louise . Minnich, D . E. (1) Harfield, Charles, Jr. (47) Joho Adam a nd nn Fun· Grand Forks Clinic ( I ) Northw(scern N a c ion a I Monrgomery, Robert eral Direcrors (I) H a m line-Asbury chool of Haydak. M . H. Morgan, Harold W . (1) Bank of Minneapoils Advertising Club of Min· Nursing, H am :ine Uni· (5 ) Head, Mrs. George D . Morrill. J . L. neapolis (40) versiry (22) Philco orporarion (32) Heffelfinger, Frank T. Morrill, MrS. J . L. Alpha D el ra Thera (Acr· Hubbard Milling Co. (6) Pillsbury Mills. Inc. (6) Heim, Russell R . (I) Morrison. Mrs. Gladys M. ive Beta haprer) (2) Jncern acionat Milling Co, R a d j 0 Corporacion of Hess, George H ., Jr. (5 ) Hoagland, F. L. Alpha Ph i Omega (5) (6) America (21) Hollaod, Elsie (41) Neely. J. Marshall (I) Alumni Association of til e Kessler & Maguire Funer R orary Club of Minnea· Howard, S. E. Nelson. Mrs. A. \VI. Division of Library In a l H ome ( I ) polis (5) Howell. Roger W . (I) Nelson. Lowry strucrion (33) King M.das Flour Mi!ls Russell·Miller Milling o. ickerson, J . R . (1) lkeda, Kano (I) Alumni Chaprer of Alpha (6) (6) Noble, John F. (I) Lucheran Church Mission Jreys. Mrs. Charles G. D elra Thera (2) Sanford H all \Vlomen's Fund (8) Jensen. R . A. (I) Oleson. Chesrer A. (8) Associarion (37 ) Acnoldc Furnicure Com- raff of Ma),o linic and J eppesen. Frederick J .• Jr. Oliver, 1. L. (1) Srenshoel Funeral H ome pany ( I ) Faculry of Mayo Found· J eppesen. Elizaberh M . Olson, E. E. (1) (I) Arkinson Milling Co. (6) arion (I) (Mrs. F. J.) Orensrcen, Allan Tennant & Hoyr Co. (6) J\.finneapo:is Associacion Johdahl, R a lph A. Petersen, Loren G. Bay rate Milling Co. (6) Tozer Foundation. Inc, of Sa les Managers (29) Johnson. Mrs. Charles E. Pererson. H erbert \VI. (I) Campus Chest (20) (12) (13) (5) Minneapolis Soroptimist Johnsoo, Christian A . Perrersen, Mrs. W . E. UniverSity House}-olders Campus Chest Board (5) Club ( 5) Johnson, Mrs. Christian Pillsbury. Nellie W. (5) Associarion ( I ) ( II ) The Minneapolis Scar and (Mrs. Charles S. ) University of Minnesoca A. Tribune (5) Preston. Lewis F. (I) Chaprer B. J . of PEO (5) Alumni Associacion of Johnson, J . A. (28) Minnesota 0 is t ri c c of Proebsrel. Jean ( 6) Children's Home ociecy chenecrady, N . Y. Johnson, Lloyd A. ( I) Evangelical L u c h e r an Prace k. Pau I H. (4 I ) of Minnesora (47) (47) Johosron. F. E. Synod of Missouri (8) University of Minnesota Coffman Memorial Union Johosron, George S. Riley, William A. The Minnesota Founda Booksrores Booksrore Jusrad. H e lga Rizer, D . K. (1) rion (9) University of Minnesota Kelly, Frank . Rizer, R. 1. (1) Cowin & Company, Inc. Minnesota Masquers (J 8) \Vlomen's Club of D e· Rood, John* (4) (16) Kidneigh, John C. ~{innesota 0 iecy of In rroir ( 15) Rorhschild, Mrs. M a urice King, R . W . D elra Phi Lambda (2 ) rernal M edicine ( I) G. F. Weber Studios, Inc. L. (34) \X7e rn ess Brothers Funer Klass, L. M. The Dulurh Clinic (I) Morrar Board (31) Koop, . E. (1) Rorrschaefer, Henry (1) a l Chapel (1) Krey. A .. (I) Rumble. Margarer Faculcy of che Universicy Nationa l Association of \Vlornen's Guild of Judson Ladd, . C. anders, lsabella Gooding of Minnesora School of Furnicu re Manufaccur· Church (5) Lander, Mrs. Edward K. ( Mrs. Parker D .) Nursing ( 6) ers. Inc. (42) Womeo's ociecy niver- ( 1) chaaf. F. H. K. (1) Faculry \Vlonlen's Club Newspaper Guild of 'he sity Lurheran Church Lane. Robe rr E. (I) chalpp, O. W. (I) (30) Twin ities of Hope (20) La rkin, Jaoe V. Schmi". Ouo H . General Mills, Inc. (6) Nordqui" & Company Y.M . . A. r. Paul am· La rson, Eva J . O . (1) cou. Mrs. George L. t Gleason Mortuary (/) (I) pus (5) KEY TO LISTINGS 18 Minnesota Masque rs cholarship Fund 19 Law Faculry Scholarship Fund NAME ONLY-gave to unrestricted fund only. 20 AII· Universiry Council Foreign Srudenrs Aid Fund NAME and * and (number) -gave to both the unrestricted 2 1 RCA cholarship Fund 22 AII·Unlversiry Scholarship Fund fund and to a restricted project. Numbers refer to pro 23 Frances Miller Brown Memorial Fund jects listed in key. 24 Anna Von He!mholcz·Phelan cholarship in reative \Vricing NAME and (number) -gave to the restricted project indicated 25 Walrer R . Srrubel Memorial cholnrship Fund 26 Fairh Thompson Scholarship Fund by the key number. 27 Music Develnpment Fuod NAME and t (dagger)-deceased, or for gifts "inmemorium." 28 J. . Litzenberg Memorial Room Fund 29 Minneapolis Associa,ion of nics Maoagers Loan Fund 30 Ma ry Farrell offman cholarship Fund KEY TO RESTRICTED PROJECTS 31. Mortar Board Emergency Loan Fund I E. T . Be ll Fund of the Minnesora Medical Foundarion 32 David Grimes M emorial cbolarship Fund 2 H enry L. Williams Memorial cholarship Fund 33 Lura Hurchinson cho/ar.hip Fund 3 Alfred Owrc Memorial Fund in Denrisrey 34 Maurice L. Rorhs hild cholarship Fuod .. Friends of rhe Library-Frank K . Walrer Lecture Fund 35 Coffman Union Fund 5 hlnese ",denr Emergency Aid Fund 36 John Mars McDonald Memorial cbolarship Fund 6 Milling Engineering cholatship Fund 37 Grace . Nelson Scholar hip Fund 7 Clara e la nd Fellowship Fund 38 M,nnesora Academy of ience-Ccdar Creek Foresr Fund 8 lohn J . Binner a ncer R esearch Fund 39 Felix M . Prederiksen Research io D airy Husbandry 9 Minnesnra Foundarion rudenr Loan and cholarship Fund 40 The Advertising lub of Minneapol,s cholnrship Fund 10 Frank H . J acobson cholarship Fund 41 p eech and H earing linic cholarship Fund II ampus hesr cholarship Fund [2 National Association of Furniture Manufacrurers cholarships 12 Tozer Fnundarion, [nc .. Scholarship Fund 43 Julia Marshall cholarship Fund 13 Tozer Foundarion. Tn c., Graduare cholarship Fund 44 Law Alumni Loan Fund 14 Householders' Loan Fund 15 Minnesota Indinn Yourb Scholarship Fund 15 niversiry of M,nnesora \Vlomen' Club of Detroit cholarship Fund 16 eho I of Nursing-Katharine D ensfocd bolarship Fund 16 J ames owin cholarsbip Fund . 7 Various ocher Restrictioos 17 William A. O ' Sroen cholar.hip Fund 18 M emorial Fund of rhe Medical lass of 1922·23 APRlL, 1950 223 COMING EVENTS ON THE CAMPUS APRIL 14-All-U rudeot Elections April l S-25-Coop Week April 2- -May I-Greek Week April 27-Educarion Day May 6-Campus Carnival Jim Morris May 12-General College Day May 12-13-Engineers Day Undergraduate Secretary May 13-Ag Royal Day May 16-Congress Recognition Dinner May 15-20- enior Week fa y 17-Ag Recognirion Day May 1 -Cap and Gown Day Eric Sevareid Will Be May 19- eni o! Prom Speaker for Greek Week Mhwesota ToU'n Is Host To 40 Foreign tudellts Eric Sevareid '35BA, former war Forty foreign students from Europe, correspondent and now chief of the Asia, and Africa were guests of the Washington Bureau of the Columbia citizen of Bertha, Minn., over the Broadcasting System, will deliver the weekend of March 17. The idea which main address at the seventh annual was concei ed by Les Milbrath, Ag Greek Week banquet to be held at studem from Bertha, \ a to gi e the the Coffman Union May 1. His subjeCt studem an opporrunity to live briefly at the banquet will be the college stu in a small M inne ota community and dent's relation to national and inter national affairs. observe the life and aCtivity of its Greek Week, sponsored by the In people. terfraternity and Panhellenic Councils, IS devoted to leadership training panels and to instructing and informing fra Engineering Teachers ternity members as to their responsi Gt:.aded By Students bilitie to the "Greek system:' the er half of the in tcuctOr In University and the Twin ities com :Nlechani al Engineering were graded munity. by student during the lir t week of Dr. Benjamin Fine, educational Mar h. tudent in 65 ecti n turned editOr of the New York Time and Eric Sevareid Greek VVeek Spe aker in 0 er I, 00 form wh ich briefly noted author, who will be at the Uni versity for a convocation calk, \ ill de cribed their in tructOr and their tea hing practi e . The ans er will be partiCIpate in a reek Week panel 963 Are Graduated At discussion on racial di crimination. Winter Commencement c mpiled b the Bureau of In titution Bill Maple LA senior of Minne The niver iry graduated 9 3 tu- al Re earch. The study was carried on apolis, is hairman of the event which dem at the annual inter commen e by Pi Tau igma, engineering h nOr stans on April 27 and is climaxed by ment Mar hI. The largest number of ary fraternity. imilar tudie have the banquet. Topics of the week '\ ill graduate came from the In titute of been made in nearly aU the llege ra nge from human relations, rushing, Techn I gy ith a toral of 2")7. The of the niver iry by tudent o\'erning and dlapter admini tration to foreign arts college graduated _10 ,nd the group. tudents, sch lar hip and campus aCti - hool f Bu ine Admini tration, lties. There al 0 wi ll be POrt event, 127. The commen ement addre was a ngfe t and fraternity and orority made by Dr. L is '\ . Jone ,pre idem open hou e . of the niver ity of Arkan a. Dr. Top Farm Judge: Ray . Han en, The ongfest, open to the public, ] nes has b en a I ad r in stud ing the g enior fr m P,lyne, Minn., wa will be unday, April 30, t 6::;0 p.m., pr posed establishment of regional r. ted tOp , gri ulmral judge f the in Northrop AuditOrium. chool in the outh. farm campu wim r judging nte t. 224 MINNESOTA HAVE Y OU VOTED ? IF NOT, DO IT NOW! ANNUAL ELECTION BOARD OF DIRECTORS The Minnesota Alumni Association The accompanying list of 14 nominees is hereby certified as correct. Each as ociation member will vote for seven dlrecrors ro serve for a three-year term. Signed Rewey Belle Inglis L. W . Thorn Louis M . Schaller Wells J. W fight, Ch. Gordon Starr Nominating Committee I INSTRUCTIONS I OFFICIAL BALLOT Seven to be Elected for a Three-Year Term 1. Place an X oppoSIte each person that you vote for. Do nor vote for VALDIMAR BJORNSON '30BA more than seven or ballot will nOt be St. Paul -0 counted VICTOR A. CHRISTGAU '24Ag Newport, Minn. -0 2. ign ballot with full name and Innial and print same as ALL ballOts MARCIA EDWARD '31MA;'35PhD will be checked against official memo Minneapolis -0 bershlp list and it is Imporrant that HENRY O. EINAN '43DDS your name I legible Minneapolis -0 3. Nominations may also be RUDOLPH T. EL TAD '19Eng made by petition from not less than Duluth -0 twenty-five members of the Associa· ELMER E. ENGELBERT, R. '20BusA tlOn filed in wnting With the Execu St. Paul -0 tive ecretary of the orporatlon not MR . CHARLE . HOYT '24Ed later than Thursday, March 30. In case of nomination by petition the (Erma B. Schurr) Edina, Minn. -0 ballot Will contain after the name of B RTON Jo EPH '42BA each person so nominated the state· Minneapolis -0 ment "NomlDated by Petition " THEODORE B. KNUD ON 1927-28 - ' 1. Clip ballot and end to Ex Minneapoli -0 ecutive Secretary, The Mmnesota HARLEY R. LANGMA '24MechE Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Fairmont, Minn. -0 Memoflal Uniun, Unlver Ity of Min· MAYNARD E. PIR I '23BA;'25LLB nesota, Mtnneapolls 14, Minne'oca. Minneapolis -0 No ballot will be accepted on any other form. DOROTHEA RAD H '24DDS;'34BA;'38M Minneapoli -0 5. Ballot must be in the office of DR. HANN C. H\\ YZER '38B &MB;39MD the E.-eclitive ecrecary by Mon t. Paul -0 day. May 15. in order to be counted. CIIARLE 1. OMMER' '90BL t. Paul -0 CLIP AND MAIL I lertify that I am a member of the MIOne otJ Alumni A. socI.Hinn and • c: NO W ellrided to vOte. Clip and mall ro Executive e(' Signature retary, The MlOnesota AlumOi Asso AdJress CIation, 205 offman Memonal Union. UniverSt[} of MlOnesora. Minneapoh Print Name I 1 Minnesota J C,r.lduation year Of },e.lrs attended 1______* * * APRIL, 1950 225 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ . ~ ~ 1950 A~ i<~ ~ ~ May 18-19-20 ~ MAY 18- CAP AND GOWN DAY g G G Registration enior Luncheon ~ Coffman Memorial nion Main BalJroo~ Coffman Memonal filon-l1 :.~O fain Lobby-Beginning at 9 a.m. oon. Tickets Available, Alumni Office. ~ , Cap and Gown Day Parade Golden Anniversary Luncheon ~ Form on teps, Northrop Memonal AudItorium. Class of 1900-Coffman Memorial 0I0n-1 2: 30 10: 30 a.m. oon. Dr. Wm. F. Braasch, Chairman. ~ , Campus Tours , ~ Cap and Gown Day Convocation Beginning from Regi tration Desk. From 2 to ~ onhrop femorial Auditorium. II a.m. 4 p.m. ~ G Open HOllses Reunion Dinners ~ Afternoon. chedule to be Announced. Fraternitie.. pecia! Classes as cheduled ~ G oroClties, Dormitories, Departments, olleges. Consrituent Groups as cheduled. G ~ MAY 19- ALUM I DAY Registration Old Grad Luncheon G ~ offman Memorial Union Main Lobh) -Beginning pon ored by Alumnae Club-Coffman Memorial ~ ~ ~~~;t~ · n~our t~;~::~~n~;:~ulty Tea ~ G BegInning at 10 a.m. Women's Lounge. offman [em C1al nion- G Beginning at 2: ~O p.m. .~ to 5 p.m. , Open House Class of 1935 Reunion ~ hedule to be Announ(ed. Both MorOlng and Charlie's Cafe Excep(Jonale-4 to 6 p.m. Earl Lar- Afternoon. 'on, haieman. ilver Anniversary Luncheon Alumni Banquet ~ la,s of 1925-Junior Ballroom. olfman lem· Main Ballroom, Coffman lemonal nlon-6:30 ~ orial nion-12 :30 oon am \V Campbell. p.m. Harold tas en ·29LLB. Pre idem of 'ni,er- ;t) halrman. >Ity of Penns}h ania. Main peaker. MAY 20-A .ilL iUEETI G DAY , R egi (ratIOn MAA Annual MeetlOg ~ olIman 1emorial 'l nlon. lain Lobb) -Begin' Junior Ballroom. offman temorial OIon . n· nlng at 9 a.m nouncement of e'l\ Board [ember,. Progress Rep rr; Plan of Action 1950·S I ~ ~ ampu Tour ' prtng Football Game Beginning at 9 .'It> .l.m Memonal tadlUm-1 : :\0 p.m, Dinner M etin Board of D,rector,. 1 A offman Memonal n· ion-6 p.m. EJection of E. l.'(uci,e ·ommiuc". For furrher Inform.Hion Ii. rite E "CUtl, e ClCct.1C) . fAA. 205 off man femOCl al OIo n. 226 MINNESOTA Stassen Will Address 1950 Reunion Big Program Set Man In A Hurry Has T1'aveled Fa1' For 3-Day Event arold E. Stassen '27BA;'29LLB, was traveling fast when he was graduated H from Humboldt High chool, t. Paul, at the age of 14 years. He's been F OR IT king size 1950 alumni right spry and generally in a bit of a hurry since. He can be patient, tOO. reunion May 18-19-20, the MAA At the University, he helped pay his way by working as a bakery grease has a king ize man ro be the principal boy, srore clerk, adding machine operaror, and two-and-a-half years as a sleep peaker. ing car conducror. Harold E. Stassen '27BA;'29LLB, He also sandwiched in time to win the Pillsbury Orarorical Contest, be a president of the University of Penn member of University debate teams, shoot on and for one year captain the sylvania, former three-time go ern or Uni ersity Rifle team which won three successive national matches at that time, of MinnesOta, and a student leader in serve on the Minnesota Law Review Board, be president of the Gray Friars, his campus days, has accepted an in ,and be eleCted ro several honor societies. vitation ro address the reunion banquet It was almost a breeze then for Stassen ro become in succession distriCt Friday evening, May 19. attorney of DakOta County, Minn., a year after he began law praCtice, governor Banquet Is Highlight of MinnesOta at the age of 31, with twO re-elections, and flag officer for Admiral As a national and international ilJiam F. Halsey in World War II. figure in governmental and socio He keynOted the Republican ational Convention in 1940 and was a economic life, and executi e of a ma strong candidate for the G. O. P. presidential nomination in 1944 and 1948. jor univer ity, tassen always has He was a U. S. delegate ro the an Francisco conference of the United ations pre sing calls upon his time. The op in 1945, has written a book, "Where I Stand," and held important lay religious portunity for his fellow alumni ro offices. hear and meet him on the campus is tassen became president of the Uni ersity of Pennsylvania in eptember, fortunate. 1948. The banquet, as in former years, ill highlight the reunion, but expan- ion of the celebration this year ro CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 1950 AL MNI RE NIO three days provides a variety of events MAY 18, 19, 20 ro crowd the banquet for intere t. The graduating classes with scheduled re Registratio11 - May 18 19, 20 - Beginning at 9 a.m. unions are those of 1900, 1925, and Your firSt srop should be the lobby of Coffman Memorial Union. Then you 1935. should regisrer, ger your special reunion insignia, tickets ro all eventS. Campu Tours Cap and GOWtl Day Parade and Convocatio11 - May 18 Pre enting ro the alumni the ni- All members of rhe lass of 1900 will garher on rhe steps of Orthrop ersity in aCtion, the reunion will em Audirorium ar 10 : 30 a.m. The graduating seniors form in front of Coffman phasize campus rours and informal Memorial nion and march over ro orchrop AuditOrium. An honor guard vi its ro put the alumni in rouch with of the senior class will conduCt the Clas of 1900 ro special sears of honor their former teachers and fellow tu in the audirorium for convocation services. dentS, open houses to bring alumni enior Luncheon - May 1 and pre ent students rogether and the ponsored by A ociated omen tudentS. To be held in Ballroom of Coff- traditional group reunion funCtions. man Memorial Union at 12 noon. Tickers available Alumni Office and ee the reunion program and the RegiStration Desk. Calendar of EventS for details as ro ampus TOllrs - May 18, 19, 20 the events and arrangements for par enior clas studeors will be a ailable at Registration De k ro conduCt either ticipatIng in them. individual or group tOurs on reque t. Regular conducted tours will be scheduled. Open Home - Ma 18, 19 orne of the fraternitle , soronties and Univer ity colleges and departments HEAR STASSEN! will hold Open Houses. chedule may be obtained at RegiStration De k. Meet Your Cta mate Golden Arwiversar) Luncheon - May 18 Tht! lass of 1900 will hold ItS Mtieth reunion luncheon in Coffman Mem At 1950 Alumni orial nion at 12 : 30 p.m. and special emeritus certificate Will be given out Reunion ro all who attend. In charge-Dr.. . F. Braa ch. APRIL, 1950 227 Old Grad LU1lcheon - May 19 Alumni Band Seeks This luncheon, in offman Memorial Union at 12 : 30 p.m., is sponsored by the Alumnae Club and is open ro all graduates who have previously cele Additional Members brated their fiftieth reunion. iit'er Atmitlersary LtmcheOll - May 19 The Alumni Band, sponsored by rhe The Class of 1925 will hold its [Wenry-fifrh reunion celebration at a Band Alumni Association, is gearing luncheon in the Junior Ballroom of Coffman Memorial Union at 12 :30 p.m. for anOther hilarious, albeit musical In charge- am W . Campbell. appearance at a 1950 football game, tude11t-Alumlli-Facul!J' Tea - May 19 similar ro irs highly successful debut Sponsored by rhe AU-Uni ersiry Congress, enior Class Cabinet, Panhellenic at (he Dad's Day game last fall Council, and Inrerfraternity Council, this event is an opporruniry for alumni The band is having monrbly re ro meet srudent class leaders and faculry members. In the Women's lounge, hearsals and is inviting all former Coffman Union, at 3 p.m. members of the Universiry band ro Class of 1935 Reullio1l - May 19 ;mend for (he practice and enjoyment The Class of 1935 will celebrate its Fifreenth Reunion by attending an Df the music and good fellowship, alumni mixer at Charlie's Cafe Exceptionale, 701 Fourth Ave. ., Minnea according ro Ernest Villas '49Ed, sec polis, from 4 ro 5: 30 p.m. Members of the class will leave together ro attend retary of the Band Alumni Associa the Alumni Day Banquet at 6: 30 in Coffman Memorial nion. Earl Larson tion. The Band Alumni Association, is chairman. a unit of (he MAA, wirh a present Alumni DaJ Banquet - May 19 strength of 500, also is seeking new This is the traditional annual alumni banquet, in Coffman Memorial nion members. at 6· 30 p.m. Each class will be seated separately. Harold E. Stassen '27BA; '29LLB, now president of the Univer iry of Pennsylvania, will be the main Inquiries about the rehearsals and speaker. A gala program has been planned. membership may be addressed ro Vil ",IAA Annual l 1!etillg - May 20 las at the Universiry Band office in The annual meeting of The Minnesota Alumni Association will be held orrhrop Audirorium. aturday at 11 : 30 a.m. At this meeting the newly eleCted board members will be announced, a progress report of the Minnesora Alumni Association activities will be given, and 1950-51 plans will be presenred. Adjournmenr will be in time for mass attendance at the spring football game. ummer Se SlOn ill pring Football Game - May 20 The question on all our lips is-What kind of team will we have next year? Ha e New Feature Graduation losses are heavy. This is your opporruniry ro see for yourself, in Again in 1950 the ummer e ion Memorial radium. of the UniveIS1ty of Minnesota is Dinner leeting - Board of Directors, fAA planning a Strong program of courses The [Wenry-one members of The 1innesOta Alumni Association Board of and instirutes and an attraCtive offer Direcrors will meet in Coffman nion at 6 p.m., ro welcome the newly ing of recreational evenrs, ew fea elected members ro the Board and ro elect from their own membership the tures include an interdepanmenral exeCUtlve committee of the year 1950-51. President Arthur Lampland, course on international relations fea presiding. turing visiting professors in five social science field , an opera workshop, and I ------, a children's theater. The panish IG P FOR ALUMNI CELEBRATIO I American Instirute has been expanded ro include imilar opporrunities in {Clip and end in to alumni office o residence houses for German and I am interested in the 1950 Alumni Reunion Celebration. I pion to attend on the dotes I have checked and om interested in taking port in the French. I events I have checked. I Ourstanding features of previous e May 18, Cop and Gown Day 8' Senior Lunch~n year which \\,111 be contlnued include Cap and Gown Parade o o Golden Anniversary Luncheon [] Cop and Gown Convocation rhe program 10 Amencan rudies, the I -0 Campus Tour I 0 Open House Workshop in Economic Education, o May 19, Alumni Day o Old Grad luncheon and Workshops in curriculum and in I o Campus Tour C Student-Alumni -Faculty Tea higher education, The Preliminary Bul .:l Open Houses I o Class of 1935 Reunion letin which appeared in hue Decem r'] Silver Anniversary luncheon C Alumni Day 8anquet ber, and the Final Bulletin which May Annual Meeting Day -= 201 came out larch 1, reveal a pro ram I [] Campus Tour Signed ______I e MAA Annual Meeting luncheon whIch wtIl malOtain the leader hip of ,., Spring Football Game (he niver Ity of 1 iinnesota amon I ~ss-=- ___I the nation ummer e lon, 228 MINNE OTA The MAA District 9 scholarship co mm ittee in sessi on March efficient o peration ; Mrs. Ed wi n R. Peterso n, Fra nk J . Herda, 12 in St. C loud to screen candidates for Un ive rs ity schola r pri nci pal of St. C loud Technical High School; a nd Bob ships. Left to right: Front-Vince Reis, MAA fie ld representa Odegard. Rear-Noel Shadduck, Dewey Re ed , D. l. Neer, tive who compli mented t he g roup for its large turnout and chairman; Fra nk Hogan, and R. W. Handke. superintendent of schools, is commit 100 Alumni Help Select tee chairman. The additional ni er iry repre- sentation is co parricipare in the selec 90 Scholarship Students rion of the Merriam scholarship wIn ners. The selecrions are co be made MORE rhan 100 Gopher alumni their schools for con idera[ion and [he soon. living in Minnesora enjoyed in benefit which will accrue co [he young The 10,000 allocated from unre- March an opporruniry for construcrive people and to [he state rhcough their reicred gift co the G. . F. will pro service to rheir Uni ersiry and to de higher education. vide one scholarship for each of the serving young people of the stare. Good Fellowship 18 disreiCts and 22 at large, ranging up These alumni served on MAA dis A number of the committee mem CO 500 each. according co need. The 50 Merriam scholar hips, for male. [Iicr screening committees which sur bers also commented on the alumni are for each. veyed and recommended candidates good fellowship which made irself so 22 5 for 90 scholarships CO be awarded for evident as the members "pur their Typical of reporrs from the indi\ id srudy at rhe Diversiry next college teeth into a project for which they ual scholarship comminee mee[in year. could envision such tangible re ults." are rhe following: The awards will include 40 Minne From the fi e candidates and five sota Alumni Freshman cholarships, alternates recommended from each of DI TRICf 9, t. Cloud, March 11 financed rhrough the Grearer Uni er [he 18 MAA Minne ora districts, the iry Fund, and 50 Jo ephine L. Mer Pr~nc D l ~r ch"irman and (H,.. alumni-sponsored University cholar Rt«!, , loud oel haddu(k, Annandalr: F riam cholae hips from rhe niversiry. ship Committee and twO chool uper W Hogan. rolc)" R. \\ H.ndkc, Elk R"cr It Edwin R. Pcrcrson, 0= Lakc; Bob Edcgud. Committee members through our the imendents named by the ni ersity PC! nc~ron. Frank Herda srate commented on the high merit of will choo e the 90 cholarship winners. The commirree had 12 application most of rhe candidates pre ented by MorriJ B) '40 fA, Anoka, Minn., ubmitted CO them from throughout APRIL, 1950 the districr. Don eer had prepared DI TRICf 8, Morris, March 13. Electrical Engineers work sheers listing the family income, In a different category was the Ha eN. Y . Reunion scholastic rating and leadership ability meeting at Morris. The twO comminee of each of the applicanrs. Applications members who responded to the meet were then given to those of the com ing call, larence Hemming, chairman. Twenty-five of the University'S elec mittee who personally knew the appli Alexandria; and Clayton Gay, Morris, trical engineering .graduate had a cant. Each case was then presented by together with F. J. Fox, Morris school reunion luncheon larch 9 in ew that person When all cases were re superintendent, had ooly four applica York City, according to Prof. Hem} ported and discussed the entire com tions to consider. After weighing the E. Hartig '18EE; '2 PhD. head of the mittee then rated and vOted on the applicants comparative merits. the electrical engineering deoartment. who applicants using all indices and evi committee listed them according to irs participated. The alumni were arrend dence presented at the meeting. After preference. It was felt more applica ing the annual meeting of the Institute this subjecti e and objective review tions would have resulted had all high of Radio Engineers. the committee listed the 10 most de school seniors of the district been The meeting concluded the term of serving applicants in order of their aware of the opportunity to apply. preference. tl/art Baile) '2 EE: '2 M . as I. R. E. president. Among the other Gopher fany fine remarks were made about alumni at the luncheon were Arthllr the entire program. Mrs. Peterson said, G. Peck 19~5-40. supen'isor of net "More scholarships should be avail work operations for CB . who ar able for all the cases studied here to night are wonhy and in need of help." Engineers' Da to ranged the reunion; C. M. Janik)' 1920-21Gr, formerly on the niversirv Bob Odegard felt that this type of Show New Ad ance electrical engineering Staff: On';//e ]. program would bring the alumni closer ather '35EE, in charge of television tOgether and he enjoyed meeting other engineering operations for CB ; and alumni interested in boys and girls HE LATEST in engineering de Cledo Brunelli ' 2EE;'37PhD who is seeking opportunity of secunng higher T velopment will be exhibited and associate direcror of re earch for the education. demonstrated to the public in the Minneapolis campus engineering build tanford Research Institute. ings during the celebration of Engi neers' Day, May 12 and 13. DI T RICf 11 Little Fall , Exhibirs will include jet plane ad Mar ch 1 vancements, models of ultra modern Pc_n, A L. Grtmes. chaornun. and P. J. housing projects. and demon [Cations Hanson. L",]e Falls, Dc S Warson. Roya! Reis 5,400 Are Invited To Hear Dr. Morrill B" VI CE REIS 1941-47GR MAA Field Representative p ERSONAL invitations have been extended to 5,400 Minnesota alumni in 11 MAA Minnesota dis tricts to attend dinner meetings in their distriCts in March and April at which University President J. L. Mor rill speaks. HUMPHREY N. Y. SPEAKER; The MAA office mailed invitations to 3,5 00 alumni living in the districts CLUB MAKES G. U. F. GIFT bur outside the 11 meeting towns, while the host clubs sent invitations to Stanley ]. Wenberg '4 1Ed;'47MA, In the principal address at the din 1,900 alumni in their communities. director of the Greater University ner, U. S. SenatOr Hubert H. Hllm In addition, tbe MAA office and the Fund, had occasion to deliver a brief phrey '39BA, reviewed activities of host clubs joined notifying newspapers but heartfelt acceptance speech at the the eighty-first congress. Ed Haislet and radio stations of the meeting plans dinner meeting of the Minnesota so tbat all possible alumni migbt learn '3 1Ed, University directOr of alumni Alumni Club of New York Feb. 27. of tbe opportunity to meet President relations, outlined accomplishments Gus Cooper '42BA, club president, Morrill and hear him discuss current presented to Wenberg a $500 check, and plans of the Minnesota Alumni activities and plans at tbe University. a gift from the club to the unrestricted Association. Arrangements being made for tbe gifts division of the Greater Univer The treasurer's annual report was meetings by the host clubs, including sity Fund. It was drawn from members' presented by Harold Woodruff '18- informal receptions preceding the din dues. DDS, treasurer. Abour 65 people ners, indicate the gatherings will be Announcement was made the club attended. (Continued on Page 23 1) will sponsor a showing of the play "Mister RobertS," by the late Tr;m Heggen '41BA, to raise money for the Shown addressing the Feb. 27 dinner meeting of the Minnesota Alumni Club of Tom Heggen memorial book collec New York City is Hubert H . Humphrey '39BA, iunior U. S. Senator from Minnesota. tion recendy instituted at the Univer Francis L. (Gus) Cooper '42BA, president of the New York club, is first to the right sity School of Journalism. The date of Humphrey. Ed win L. H aislet '31 Ed, Un iversity director of alumni relations, represent was to be set later. ing the MAA, is second to the left of Humphrey. APRIL, 1950 231 Formation of Alumni Clubs Booms C ONCRETE evidence the MAA's for showing at a coming meeting of New Club Organized reorganized activiry program is the club. Bostwick also invited attend i1rous ing alumni interest and stimulat ance of a MAA representative. In Orlando, Fla. ing activiry tOward formation of new clubs, as well as reaceivation of dor The Minnesota Alumni Club of Or mant clubs, is given in recent inquiries HURON lando, the first MinnesOta alumni club to the MAA office. Existing clubs are formed in Florida, was organized inviting programming ass istance from "How about an alumni club here in March 4 at a luncheon meeting in the the MAA office, also. Huron?" (S. D. ) asked Neil D. Ran Orange Court Hotel. University Presi kine '4 1BusA, in a message to the dem J. 1. MorriJJ was the guest of MAA office. The answer is YES! The MASON CIT Y honor and principal speaker. MAA gladly stands ready to cooperate Philip R. Jacobson '22BusA, of with any individual or group of alumni Joining in the welcome to Pres idem Mason Ciry, Iowa, has asked about the in and around H uron who will work Morrill were represematives of Ohio possibility of the formation of a dub tOward formation of a MinnesOta rate University, where he formerly at Mason Ciry which might include Alumni Club of Huron. was alumni secretary, and the Univer alumni from throughout northern siry of Wyoming, where he as presi Iowa. He offered to arrange for a com dem before coming to MinnesOtfL mittee meeting with a MAA repre Herbert ]. Bemo1/ '25BusA, was sentative to lay plans for the project. Great Falls Qub elected dub president and MrJ. 1I7 ayl1e Is Reactivated Cooper secretary-treasurer. The club, MO COW which includes members from throughout cemral Florida, decided to Word recently from Mrs. Harriet At a reactivation meeting of the have twO meetings yearly. one of which l ohman Scheldmp '35Lib, was that a Minnesota Alumni Club of Great Falls will be in February, the Univer iry's group of about 40 alumni of the Uni Mont., the guest speakers were George founding momh. All Mionesora alumni versity and former MinnesOta residents S(le lldJen '36Ed; '42MEd, football line wimering in Florida will be welcome we re planning a dinner meeting at at the February meetings. Moscow, Idaho. he asked for fi lms on coach and former Gopher lineman, and Universiry football and Other activities Chet Roan, assistant to Athletic Di Dr. Morrill tOld his listeners that for the dinner program. rectOr Frank McCormick. They dis the measure of the Univer iry' sen' ice is the influence its alumni ha e on cussed Uni ersiry acei irie and ~rid the communiry state, and national iron developments. Jaek . T helen D E MOINES life. AI 0, he said, the alumni inRuen e Mo ies of 19 9 Gopher fOOtball '05LLB, club president, discussed re the Univer iry. and are a pan of it, as games have been requested of the organization of the club for rene ed are rhe faculty and studems. MAA office by DOli L. Bas/wick activity. Benson pre ided and the Rev. Clar '25 BA, president of the Minnesota F 110 ing the club meeting, Minne e/lee H. Be/lS011 '0 , pronounced the Alumni lub of Des Moines (Iowa ), Ota football movies were shown to a bles ing. joint assembly f the Minnesota Club and the Great Falls Quarterback ' lub 5,400 INVITED Wilmington Club Elect (Continued from Page 230 ) vendsen and Roan made hort talks. One hundred fifty persons were pres P. R. Johnson President warm, friendly, and informati e as to the affair of the Uni ersiry and the em. Pm" R. l ohman '19PhD, as elected place f the alumni in them. Though only 23 Minnesota alumni pre ident and George Rieger '41 f , The meetings chedale, as an- were at the meeting of the alumni club ecrerary of rhe Minne ora Alumni nounced in the March MINNE OT A, proper, R. E. Ulril1g . 7 Ag. reporting lub £" ilmington Del.) t a is : moker Feb. 2 . John on had been the meeting to the MAA ffi e, aid MARSHALL. DIS!. 6. Marcb 28; PIPE TONE. erving a acting ectetary. Plan were DlSt 5, .March 29; FAOOfO T . DIS<. 4. {arch vend en and Roan ere ver well lU, NE~ UL I. D lSt 3 March 31. T . CLOUD. made for a dinner meeting April 13. DIS! 9. April 10: R HESTER, Di t. 1. April recei ed and there were indi, rion At rhe m ker '; ere: II. HIBBLNG. DIS! I ~. April 17: BEMIDJI, they parked a renewed imere t In an Dis! II. April 18. THIEF RIVER FAL • Dist. Paul H Aldricb. Ides A. D ahleD. V.\lSbn A J Il. Apr" 19. FARGO· I ORHEAD, DIS!. 2. at a ti e alumni club in reat Fall . Enlte lh~rd(,. H . B. Gage. F (H.k 0IU'. Horold fargo. April 20, and ALEXA DRIA, DI S! S. Hick. K. . Johnson. Paul R John on. urus Ap ril 21 ~. e eral alumni pre em offered ro aid Kern. B H JahlmJn. R f IcAdam. " '. \\ . The dinners will be "' G. 0 pm .. ex "President Morrill held the atten tion of all as he told of the extensive development and expansion of the Minnesota campus. His message, con cerning the wonderful aims and ac complishments of the MinnesOta 'U'. was greeted witb enthusiasm by the alumni." This report of the address by Dr. J. 1. Morrill, University president, at the Feb. 21 meeting of the MinnesOta Alumni lub of Pittsburgh came from Mrs. Helen A. Stenberg (Helen A. Hanson ) '46HEc, the club's secretary Directing activities of t he Minn e sota Alumni Club of Austin (M inn .) a nd a ppar treasurer. e ntly e njoyi ng t he ex pe rience a re: left t o right. James G . Huntting '23LLB, presid e nt; Ed na M artini '42 Ed , vice presid e nt; a nd Fre d e rick P. W erner '48UniCol, secre t a ry Ed Haislet '31Ed, University direc treasurer. tor of alumni relations, gave a resume of the aims and activities of tbe Min nesOta alumni groups throughout the 126 Welcome Morrill at Philly; nation. Otis McCreery '22F, was roast. rna ter. The decorations, according to Mrs. ten berg, included an "honest-tO Club Names Sid Parsons Head goodness" cberry tree and hatchet, American flags and tu lips. Thirty-nine One hundred twenty-six persons Battle, Mr and Mrs. Robert Rogers Beebe ( Laurel Anderson ), Mr and Mrs. Carl Berzel,us, members of the club and guests at turned out to extend a royal welcome ad Boerner, Earl D . Bond, William B. Boyum, tended. Mrs. Mildred Jordan Coleman ( Mildred Jordan ), to Dr. J. 1. Morrill, Universiry presi secretary to ~fc s_ SC3sseo; Mr. and Mrs. Alben dent, and Mrs. MorrilLwhen they vis rawford, Jane C"dland, Mr. and Mrs. Mdes A. The club unanimou ly elected to its Dahlen, Orney E. Dunnum. Mr. and Mrs. Temple board of direcrors Jolm H. Gdlell ited Philadelphia Feb. 25. With Har o Eaton ( ESther Rogness), Mr. and Mrs \V J . old E. Stassen '27BA;'29LLB, president Ellwood . Mr and Mrs Clarence D . Ender, Mr. 1918-20, Sam Reno '25BA, and N. C. and Mrs. John Erhart. of the Universiry of Pennsy lvania, and Towle '12EE. Mary Poley, William C. FoSter. Hugh B. Gage Mrs. Stassen as hosts, arrangements for Phd,p Gelb. Mr and Mrs. Walcer F. Graham Present at the dinner were : the meeting, a luncheon at HoustOn ( Evelyn FoSter ) . Dr. ESther Greisheimer. John T . Grisdale. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Halik, Mabel J . K. M. Abernathy, Mr. and Mrs. Frank T Allen ( .Mary Helen Bartlett), M. M. Anderson , lofr Hall on the Pennsylvania campus, were Henderson. . H Holmberg. RI chard C. Hunter. Mc and Mrs. Hugh M. Hu[[on, Vincent Irwin. and Mrs. J . F. Bailey ( Lill,.n . Schmidt), Glenn in charge of the Minnesota Alumni Mr. and Mrs M P Jacobs. Mrs. Harry Jefferson Barnum, Robert orbett, Mr. and Mrs. Rober< L. Club of Philadelphia. Edwin L. Hais ( Margaret CraIg ) . K Johnson. Sheldon John. Pelt. Mr. and Mrs. J . H . GiUen, Bruce Harris. son, Ivoc V. Jones, Mrs Samuel R. Jorousky Mr. and Mrs harles P Hant, Mr. and Mrs. let '31Ed, Minnesota DirectOr of ( Eunice ESther Feldman ), loUIS F. Lambert and Theodore R Jolly, t.tr. and Mrs. S. B. Knutson. daughter and son· in-law Mr. and Mrs. ForreSt E Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kubachl, Henry P L:moD, Alumni Relations, represented the Mr and Mrs \'(fillacd . Lighter. Anderson; ~(r and Mrs. Bernard Larpemeur, .Mr. MAA at the luncheon. and Mrs. Robert A Larsen, Mr. and Mrs. Myrl A. Otis Me reery, Frank E Mooney. Mr nnd Mr Dr. Morrill discussed current affairs Lindeman, Edward J . Luck. Dr Pred W Luehrong. Leonard A Nesgoda ( loIS J . Randolph), Mr. and Joseph H . Mader. Rlcb:vd M. Markham. W . Mrs. Sam Reno ( Kathenne Moran) . Mr. and Mrs at the Universiry and expressed his Prank Marshall, George P Masologices, Mr. and Glenn Stenberg. Mc. and Mrs. Frank St V,neeDt, wish f;r a close relationship between Mrs. E. L. McMillen, Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. 1\1r and Mrs. ClIfford Swensen, Mr. and Mc Merman, arl \'(f. Moeller, \'(filli.m 0 Murphy, Ge rp,e B Todd, Neal . Towle the University and its alumni. Haislet Mrs M,nam NIcholson ( Minam B. PUSln ) , Mr reporred on the MAA's expanding and Mrs ArVId E. Nissen ( Agnes WerdenhofT l. Alvar J . Nixon, Cyrol S. Olson, Leseer B Orfield , program and growing membership. Mr. and Mrs. S,dney A. Parsons with son, Sidney The Philadelphia club elected id A. Jr., and daughter, Peggy Lou ; Mr and Mrs. WINS NATIONAL CITATION O. L. Patterson. Ir. and Mrs. harles E. Peterson, Parso11S '25EE, president, and Milt Donald G . Peeerson . Arcbie Holmes, Ag education senior Slone '44 hemE, vice president. Bill John 0 Peterson. Mrs. Florence Weld Po 1950 GOPHER FOOTBALL SCHEDULE EPT 30-W A HlNGTON in WINTER SPORTS j\1innesota Stars eattle Won and Lost Summary OCT 7- NEBRA KA in Mpls. 1949-50 Season OCT 14-- ORTHWESTERN in ( CS ) - CooIerence "anding Evanston ( oc) - Non·confereoc< games ( c I - Cooference games OCT 21-0HlO STATE in Mpls. W L T C BA KETBALL ( e ) 4 6 OCT 2S-MICHlGA in Mpls. BA KETBALL ( ne ) 8 HOCKEY 5 11 OV. 4--IOWA in Mpls WIMMlNG .J. 7 WRESTLING 6 5 3 Ov. ll-MlCHIGA TATE in INDOOR TRACK 1 3 6 Easr lansing BOXING 4 2 2 OV. IS-PURDUE in Mpls. GYMNA TIC 2 OV. 25-WI CO IN in Madison 8 Lettermen on Diamond Trip Duluth Skiers Win A baseball squad of 20 comprised of Leo Nomellini, 1948 and 1949 All Amer· Invitation Tourney eight lettermen, seven newcomers, and ican football tackle, won eight of his nine wrestl ing matches in Big 10 competi. The ski team of the Universiry five reserves from the 1949 roster has tion this season. Duluth Branch coroplered an unbeaten ju t returned from a very ambitious eason by winning its own fourrh ao· swing through the tates of Oklahoma nual invitational meet March 3 at and Texas. The trip, one of the mo t Mount du Lac, hester Park, Dulurh. Again t the Dulurh Branch' low peo extensive trai ning journeys since pre· aIry core of 0 point , t ut In ticute. war days, included eight games agai nst Menominee. i .. was ecood with the Universiry of Oklahoma, Texa A 109 and arietOn Colle e. orrhfield. & M, Baylor, and Texas University. Minn .. third with 1 L . Each match was a two game eri es ; the highlight of which ~ a a double stand with the N AA hamps, the Murph of Duluth et Texa Longhorns on March _ ~ and 23. Ne National Jwnp Mark Of the eight lettermen on oach Dick A niver iry Dulurh Bran h kier. iebert's tea m, Ll yd Lundeen, pitcher; Fred [urphy, recently recei ed a great Duane Baglien. enter field; Jerry deal of publiciry in the Rocky Moun mith, left field; and Bob Ocne s. tain paper when he et a new national catcher are outstanding pro peets. The rec rd at teamb at priog, Colo. Ii e n n·letterm n who sa ~ consider. Mu rphy jumped 2 6 feet to eclip e the old re ord b eight feet. Another able play are headed by ba ketball Duluth athlete ~ h gained rec gnitioo Captain '\ hitey k Harry Coope r, Minnesota's pole vault during tlle month of larch wa ba The opher will pen their Big 10 and broad jump spe cialist and a standout k tball Center Rud .Mon n. .Moo n conferen e chedule on April 2 on J im Ke lly 's track te am, is completing \ ho tallied _ p int again t r. laf his last yea r as a Gopher. He will gradu. agai n t th University of IlJinoi In 11 g and _1 again t Hamline ate from the College of Education in eleCted 00 e\"er,lL tate Minneapoli . June. 1950 HOMECOMING - MINNESOTA VS. IOWA - NOV. 4 236 MINNESOTA Cagers End Year BIG 10 BASKETBALL SEASON'S STANDINGS Minn. Opp. In Sixth Place W L Pcc. Prs. Prs. OHIO TATE 11 1 .9 17 ~8- 672 MinnesOta's basketball team, lack WI CON IN ') 750 70l 660 ing in experience and height, but not INDIANA , 5 .583 -60 70!; in scrappy spirit, finished the season JLLINOIS 7 5 .583 ,98 756 in sixth place in the Big Ten Confer IOWA 6 6 .500 695 7·\ 1 MINNESOTA 4 8 674 ence standings. The Gophers won four .333 660 MICHIGAN 4 8 .333 687 733 games and lost eight in conference NORTHWESTERN 9 250 666 -55 play. In its early season non-conference PURDUE 9 .2 50 63:-; 69~ games, Minnesota won eight of nine, losing only its second match with the ference standings. The game was never Gophers Have Won University of WashingtOn. Summaries in doubt as Minnesota kept the Iowa of the Gophers' late season games team confused by a brilliant defense Six Cage Titles follow: and sparked by the fine offensive shoOt· ing of Skoog, Johnson and Sophomore Although 13 years have gone by PURDUE guard Art Anderson. since the Gophers last won a Big-10 In a batde to avoid the cellar posi basketball Championship, its sixth, tion in Big-l0 standings, Purdue on WISCONSIN there are only three teams in the con its home court Feb. 25 bartered Minne ference that have won more tides than sota 55-39 to better slighdy its posi (At Minneapolis ) Minnesota. Indiana has for many years tion, although the Boilermakers still been considered the basketball school MinnesOta came close but nOt close hold tight to the number nine con of the midwest and yet, the H oosiers enough as it dropped the final home ference position with three wins and have won only three championships. game of the season to Wisconsin eight losses compared to a three-seven The lead belongs to Wisconsin which 60-54 before 12,821 fans in Williams Minnesota record. For the Gophers it has had 13 ti des si nce 1906, followed Arena. The contest was nip and ruck was a rough night. Whitey Skoog. by Purdue and Illinois with II and 8 as the Gophers led 37-29 at halftime Gopher captain and standout player, championships respectively. The Go on the splendid showing of Wally was ill with the flu and his teammates phers won the first conference run-off Salovich. At the beginning of the seemed lost without his support. in 1906 and tied with Illinois in 1937 second half it was obvious that Minne· for their last crown. The champion. sota had lost its tOuch for the Badgers ship scoreboard ranks as follows : IOWA scored 10 points before the Gophers (At Minneapolis ) WIS ONSIN. 13; PURDUE, 11 ; ILLINOIS. countered with a fielder. 8. MINNESOTA and HICAGO, 6 each. 1-11 HI. In a fast moving game that saw the It was a sad evening for Wisconsin's GAN and OHIO STATE, 5 each; IOWA .. nd lead change hands 15 times in the first Don Rehfeldt as he vainly attempted INDIANA. 3 each; and NORTHWESTERN. 2. half, Minnesota suffered its sixth loss to score 29 points which would have Michigan State ollege joined the of the current basketball season to broken the conference season scoring conference this year, to make it once the University of Iowa, 64-62, at Min record. Big Don fell only 8 poiors short more the Big-10. It had been the Big·9 neapolis. Once again, it was the brilli as he fouled out with eight minutes for several years, following the with ant floor play of Whitey Skoog that remaining in the game. drawal of the University of hicago stole the show and also accounted for 28 points of the MinnesOta total score. With less than a minute remaining, WATER BALLET koog narrowed the Iowa lead to two Skoog Scores 374 and Maynard Johnson vainly attempted Rhythm, precision, and partern twO set shots which rimmed the bas For New Season Mark swimming, ltghted numbers, comedy ket but failed ro drop through. Myer (Whitey) koog, Minne Ota's routines, and high and low diving are basketball captain, set an all-time Uni on the program of Rhythm in wim IOWA versity scoring record the past season time, the University Aquatic League's (At Iowa City) according to a final statistics check. 1950 water ballet. Ir will be presented A fighting Gopher team completely koog, a junior from Brainerd, Minn., Friday and arurday, April 1 and 15, rumed the tables on the niversity of broke the record formerly held by Jim at 8 :15 p.m., in ooke Hall n the Iowa as it trounced the Hawkeyes in McIntyre, opher ceorer, by 14 poims Minneapolis campus. Iowa ity 64-49. For MinnesOta it was as he nerted a toral of 37 in 22 games. " wimphony of Familiary MelodIes" an important game for the win placed koog, who is a prominent candidate is the theme for the sh w, wh ich will MinnesOta in a tie for sixth p lace with for All-American honors, ha recently feature several new novelty numbers Michigan, whereas a loss would have been selected forward on the As oci with spe ia] musical arrangements given them the cellar po inon in con- ated Press all Big-1O team. Mrs. Louraine larsen i direct r APRIL, 1950 237 A Message ENDING LONG CAREER (Continued from Page 23 HAVE YOU from soloist for the Easter unday concert April 9. He has played throughout THOUGHT OF MARS MinnesOta and in many music centers in the United States. By HIRLEY MA YER A bachelor, Professor Lindsay has and MARY D A HLBERG lived at the Campus lub. His plans Correspondence Field R epreseorative , for the future, he is nOt revealing. cudent Housing Bureau Instruction? M AR I A new organization on MEDICAL OFFICER the University campus; it means The Hennepin Counry (Minn.) Medical for MinnesOta Association of Rooming ociery has named as its president-elecr house Students. Reuben F. EricllIon '2 5B ,'26MB,27MD_ last fall the Dean of Students' of of Minneapolis. He rakes office nexr Ocr. Btl illess Course 2, succeeding R obert F. J1[cGand y '20B ; fices made a survey of student partici ·22MB;'23MD. Ocher new officers include pation in campus activities. It showed Dr. W,ll,am R Jones '38ChemE, Roberl Education that the vast majority of srudenr E. Pmsl '29BA,'3 1B &MB;'32MD;' 1M , activities were dominated by a small vice presidencs; and G eorge . Aagl14rd group, composed largely of sororiey. Jr., '34B ;'36MB;'3 MD, and Ralph H Psycbology CreIghton '22B ;'23MB,'2-lMD, direCtors. fraternity and dormitOry students. tudents living in rooming houses History were found to be practically non participating ociology The tudent Housing Bureau de THE~RING cided to tadele the problem. raff OF DISTINCTION members set up house meetings at Engineering many of the larger rooming houses. loNG AWAI1EO"VA\lASlE They introduced the Idea of inter NOW #"' Cbild 1 elfa1"e house activitie , and gOt the students' suggestions for social and athletic Signet lop with Crest eveor . and m r ... Intaglio for The students' re pon e was over the Rugged whelming. They formed their own or Individual ganization and called it MAR . Each de crib d in house elected a repee entatlve to form an inter-hou e council. and coordinate bulletin "L" activities. A charter wa drawn up providing f r a chairman and e en major comminees on maj r intere t ~ rite for bulletin fie lds. Dan McMenemy ~ as elected general halrman. The organization is new, but it's growing fa t. Eighty [0 ming h uses ORRE PONDENCE have j ined and student member hip TUDY IS 500. The group has a potential •• ITS SI",PlICITV, .. EAUTV I., membership of .000. STONE sET. S OR SLUE SPINEL. DEPARMENT Fighteen basketb, II teams have been CHOICE Of GARNET. RUSV ··fOR",,I>.TION fURTHER \", organized. Exchange parries held ha e fOR WRITE • • ·· · - tnduded such thi ng as picnics, quare ,l>.NO PRICE U llit'er ity of , Linne ola dances, weiner rats. hay ride , ard partie, amI CI,ll dance, get L.G.Balfour CO. iHilllleapoli 14 acquainted coke d,ue , and open I 3 0 9 '/2 F 0 U R T H 5 Too 5 E hou e . MIN N E A , 0 LIS , MIN N E SOT A 238 MINNESOTA '96 WINS HIGHWAY AWARD '26 CharleJ P. KeyeJ. 2225 E. Lake of the Isles Mrs. R . R Parker, 1·i 01 June Ave 5., T yrol blvd , Minneapolis, correspondent. Hills. Mlnne-apoli ~. correspondtnt. To Mtchael ]. Hoffmann 'IICivE, has E, F, Flynn gone the 1949 George S. Bartlett award, E. R. Booth Edward F, Flynn '26LLB, spoke at Town highest national honor of the American Edu·in R. Booth '26BA; 1925-29Gr, re Hall in New York Ciry Feb, 21 on "Why highway industry. The presentation was cently was named vice president and gener We Should Adopt the World Calendar." March S in Cincinnati, Ohio, at the con al manager of the Regan Brothers Co., He also recorded for a broadcast on ABC vention of the American Road Builder5 Minneapolis wholesale bakery firm . He also and appeared in an interview on WPIX, Association. He was selected by the presi was elecred to the board of directors. He New York Daily News television station. dents of the American Association of State advanced through a variery of posts in (he Highway Officials, Highway Research Board company to his new responsibilities_ Edwin Booth is a son of Albert E. Booth '99MD '99 of the National Research Council, and Road Builders' Association. Hoffmann has Dr. Stephen Baxter, 4530 Colfax Ave. 5 , ~linoeapoli s. corre-spoodem. been a member of the Minnesota State '30 Highway Department since 1914 and the Dr. F. M. Manson MrJ_ Kennelh So.. t , 1924 Irving Ave. 5, state commissioner since 1939. ~rloneapolis . correspoodenc. Frank M . Ma1lJOn '94BS ;'95MS;'99MD, and Mrs. Manson, of Worthing[Qn, Minn., A. J. Harris recently rerurned from a three months' Abraham J. HarrIS '30BA, recently was [Qur of the West Indies in which they named assistant solicitor general in the visited Haiti, Santa Dominica, Puerto '07 United States Department of Justice. He Rico, the Virgin Islands, Antigua, Barba· H erb ert S. Woodward, 4000 R I TER CON TINUE T DY '24 H on John A . If/cds, 40R Parkv,cw Terrace, AL MNI O-A T HORS From Marshall, M,nn., the sisters Gil 1 yrol H ,lis, correspondent bertson are enrolled at the Universiry for Jean /111m Dorsey '13BS;'21MS, and advanced srudy. Doreen LOII/se ' SEd, seeks F. R. Kappel Paf/lella ~.. Jtckell '23B ;' 32PhD, are co additional credits, while Norma Jane ' 9Ed, P. R. Kappel '21Eng, and tIIrJ. Kappel authors of the book "Managemenc in Fam IS working for her master's degree in the (Ruth 1hm) '25HEc, live at 17 Hewitt ily LiVIng," published by John Wiley &. Graduate chool. A brothe", De111J1e LeRoy, Ave., BronxvIlle S, N . Y. Kappel is a vice sons, New York_ Author Dorsey IS a form wa graduated from the Instirute of Tech president of (he American Telephone and er member of the Universlry home eco nomic staff. nology JD 1944. Telegraph Co. APRlL, 1950 239 '36 Ifrs. W.,ght Brool", 5056 Garfield Ave. S., ALF PILLSBURY DIE ~rlnoeapoJis. corre~pondeot. Kutscher and Wentz '02 Recently rerurned from Pmsburgh, Pa., M. L. McBride to Minneapolis to jive, R. II. KlitJcher ,HDrton L. McBrtde '02LLB, ar DIckin '36EE, reponed he had frequent visirs son, . D., at "1. He was a former stare wlrh John 1I7 entz ·36EE. John, Kurscher senator from tark ounty in orch Da· saId, has complered buildIng a sailboat.' kota and a natIve of Lake City, Minn. '39 '02 IIrI Arthur Nallal.", 19 Banon Ave SE., Caroline M. co by ~Ilnneapolis. corre1pondenc Caro/we M. CroJb} '02BA, March 7 in A. J. a h, Jr. Minneapolis at -8. he bad served as ec· Allan]. WaJh, Jr .. '39J, Northwest Air· retary of her class for many years and was hnes west coast publicity agent rhe pasr a former VICe preSIdent of the General rwo years, has been named the company's Alumni AssoClarion, now named [he Min aSSIStant dIrector of publicity with head· ne or3 Alumni Associarion. Mi s Crosby quarters In the Twin Iries. He succeeds was a former member of the Minnesota Harr} ReaJOller 1940- 2, resigned. Rea· rate Board of Control and was head resi so ner is now studying ar rhe University. dent of Unity eruemeor House In linne apoh 13 years. '40 A. F. Pills bury ' 13 Robert McDon.;id, 3529 Thlrty·fifth Ave. S, flO neapolis. correspondent. D r. F. A. Bo}lan AI/red P. Pillrbury '94LLB, In Minnea C. H. Han on polis March 12 ar age 81. He was a di· Fr([IlCIJ A Bo}lan '1300 , in Minnea· n rhe scaff of rhe University of North rector of Pillsbury Mills, a leader in ciVIC polis Jan 18, ar 59. He pracuced In Mlnne· Carolina Agronomy Department is Clarence and an circles and a loyal friend and sup· apolis 20 years and in Hibbing, Minn., H Hamon ·40Ag. Last summer he was porter of his alma marer. He was one of even years until his retirement a few f1ecred secretary of the Easrern Alfalfa 1m· rhe earliesr greats In Minnesota footbali, a months ago. He was a World War I provement Conference. capraln of rhe ream for two years, and a veteran. His widow is the former Lydia player for seven years, 18 6·92. He played Edna Kleffman ·19BA. baseball at Minnesota 1887-93. He be '41 queathed jewelry worth approximately '20 Eben Pinger, 61·18 N. Rockwell, hie.go 45, 100,000 ro rhe Grearer Unlver ity Fund JJJ, correspondent. for cancer research, ord\'aU H. M. Koh n ,1Irs Glen IF Nordl'all (Clarice Kraft) 20Ed, larch 15 in lioneapoli, ar 53. lIou'ard M. Kahn '39B " lLLB, is prac· he was a hIgh school reacher in linne ricing law in rhe leveland, OhIO, firm 01 apolls and raples. Dassel, and Hasungs, Gro~sman . chleslnger & Caner. Previous· G. G. Mitchell Minn Her hu band, who survIves her, is Iy he was wlrh (he chief counsel's office of GrOl'ey G. Mitchell . ~ J, who has been a finnesota alumnus. rhe Federal Bureau of Internal Revenue. execuuve vice presideor of the firsr a· Res . 111.0 JunIper Rd. uonal Bank of velerh, Minn., has moved '25 to Dallas, Texas, where he is wirh the O .. Aas '47 General Insurance ompany of Ametlca. Oltter AaJ '2-lBA;'25LlB, March 22 SI Joan E. ham pion h([rleJ HIIUhillJO I 29BA, 10-year 'Ct. . Ra} mo nd eran 01 (he Forel,gn er"iee, In Tokyo. Joan E. h,lIllpJ{JII' 18MdT, writes that GordDII 1'1 R([)mon Proving you n ver know what to expe t at a ques ti n Bill sa id, " I hadn' t thought of th is in q uite these term before, but nuw that I 10 k at J ohn Thomp un here beside me a nd remember hi good wurk, I think ] can vef)' easil y poi nt out a most impor tant di fierence between mericans and Press people in some other parts of the world." John coul d fee l a red ness creepi ng up his neck as all the reporters louked hi ' way. "John Thomp on," Bill said, " has been w rking up our wa)" fo r twenty-five years. Conference He represent an American idea or tradi tion that's based on twu thing - freedo m and enterprise. J uhn is a ;\e~ York Li fe agent. Thruugh the li fe in surance he se lls, HN T H OMP~ON had alwavs been se :\.fter a long-lost-brother greeting, Bill men attain security ior thei r iami lies, not cretly proud of his friendship with Bill said, " \Y e'" have t wait a few mi nutes, J b,' compul sion of the state, but a a ma tter T urner. Dr. Turner. Judge Turner. Pr - J ohn. T he press wan ts to ask a few ques oi choice. Th e~ ' ge t security without 10 ing fessor Turner. Wh erever interna ti nallaw tions. Then we' ll head fo r the country for thei r ireedom. And that's a mighty impur was mentioned, there Bill Turner's na me the weekend. I have to go to \Y ashington tant difference." was mentioned, too. And now Bill was M onday . .. " J ohn noticed th a t the old coming home from E urope after making a professori al pace had been tepped up t a A couple o f bul bs fla hed a nd J ohn special survey for the government. man-of-affa ir rapidity, but otherwise Bill blinked. John had received a note fr m Bill, posse ed thesameoldshaggy fri endliness. w, if it's all right with you," Bill mail ed from London, suggesting tha t he A t the press co nference J ohn stood be ~aid to the reporters, "J ohn and J are mee t the shi p in . ew York. 0 here J ohn side Bill, who parried some q uestion. skil going off on a littl e fis hing trip- another was, boardi ng the shi p to meet Bill Turner. full y and answered others with a cri sp good America n custom." d irec tness. NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMP ANY I n el abora ting on the answer to one 51 M adison Avenue, N ew York 10, N. Y. FEW OC P ATrONS offer a mao so much in the way o f personal r eward as life under· writing . Maoy ew York Life agent are bu ild ing very sub tantial futures fo r th t: m· e lves by hel p ing others pla n ahead for tbeirs. If you w o uld like to kn w mo re a bo ut a life insurance career , talk it vee with the Ne'." Y rk Life ma nager in yo ur c mmunity-o r write t tbe Home ffice at tbe address above. Which Is Miss Ideal Teacher? 242 MINNESOTA MINNESOTA Continuing the Minnesota Alumni Weekly which was estab IN THIS ISSUE- lished in 1901. Published monthly from October through April, and bi-monthly May-June and July-August, by the Minnesota Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Union, University of Minne· sota, Minneapolis 14. Member of the American Alumni Council. Page EDITORIAL 243 Vol. 49 May-June, 1950 No.9 A Little About a Lot THOMAS C. BUXTON, '40Ex Editor LETTERS 244 THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Edwin L. H aislet '31Ed . Executive Secretary Executive Committee Alumni Relations Executive Staff Edwin L. Haisl« '31 Ed Dieeeror MAY -JUNE FEA TIJRE 245 Arthur O. Lampland Thomas C. Buxron '30BBA;'34LLB . .... Preside or '40Ex MINNESOTA The College of Education Harvey Nelson Vincent R . Reis '25Md ... Firsr Vice President '41·'47Gr Field Represen,a,ive Gerald Friedell Rudolph Elsrad '47 Membership Socrerary , 19IT . Second Vice Presiden, "ALUMNI" COMPANIES James Morris '49IT 250 Maynard Pirsig '25LLB Secrerary Undergraduate Secretary 1fi Arnulf Ueland '17 ..... Treasurer lJIeanor Willits, Minnesotans Prominent Two Firms 'I9Ex Records Division Arthur R. Hustad '16 . . . . Pas, Presideor Ruby Robbins Mailing Division Teresa Firzgerald Mrs. Leo \VI. Fink '21Md '18Ex . . . Office Secrecary OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT AWARD 251 Board of Diree,ors 1950 Winner Chosen Term expire, 1950: Valdim.r Bjornson '30; Ben M. Bros '23IT; Marcia Edwards '3IMA ;'35 PbD; Rudolph Elsrad 'I9IT; Mrs. Leo \VI. Fink '21Md; Maynard E. Pirsig '25LLB; Charles Sommers '90. TBrm expireJ 195 1: William Anderson '13; Arrhur R. Husrad '16; Laweence E. ( Duke) Johnson '291T; John F. McGovern 'IILLB; Owen 1950 REUNION 251 H . Wangen"een '22Md;'25 PhD; Harold E. Wood '23; Wells J. Wrigh, '36LLB. Term expireJ 1952: Theodore Christianson '37LLB; Mrs. Harold S. Ebtrhardt '31; Arthur O. Lampland '30BBA;'34LLB; Francis L. (Pug) THE ALUMNI CLUBS 253 Lund '35Ex; Harvey Nelson '25Md; John S. Pillsbury, Jr., '40LLB; Arnulf Ueland '17. Morrill Tour Big Success; Counseling Meetings R,/JrSSMllalif)6I on SenaJII Commilles on lruercoJlegialtl AthleticI: Roben Sbay '24·27, and Don Lampland '39IT. R.p"J."tali~. 0" Se"aJ. Com mille. 0" Student Affairs: Mrs. Harold S. Eberbardt '31. R,p"s."taJi~ • • " U"ion Board 01 Gov""orJ: Thomas Salmeo '41. StamJing Commit'" Chairmen: A,hletics, Robert Shay '24-'27. Invesrroeots, ArnuH Uelaod '17. NOSTALGIA : Remember When? 256 Committee on 'he Advisory Committee, George Leahy '23-'27, Honorary Life Board Members P(l1I PresidenlJ: William F. Braasch 'OO;'03Md; George Earl '06;'09Md; Arthur R. Hustad ' 16; Charles F. Keyes '96;'99LLB; Ben W . Palmer ARCHIVE University Papers, Pictures Collected 257 ' Il;' I3LLB;'I4MA; Erling S. Plarou '19;'2IMd; Edgar 1'. Zelle '13. PaJI Tredsurer: Thomas P. Wallace '93;'95LLB. Honorary Life Associatioo Members MINNESOTA PROFILES 258 Dr. J. L. Morrill, Ptesi dent of ,he Universi!)'; E. B. Pierce, former Director of Alumni Relations. RELIGION ON THE CAMPUS 259 GREATER UNIVERSITY FUND Stanl Board of Trustees TIJDENT LIFE 260 Alumni : Arthur R. Husrad ' 16, Chairman; Elmer E, Engelbeer '20; John K. Fesler '24, '26 LLB; Parker L. Sanders '18; Mrs. Arnulf Ue· lanJ ' 17 University Adminisuation: Presiden, J. L. Morrill, Vice President SPORTS 262 William T , Mlddl~brook, Vice President Malcolm M. Willey, Fred B. Snyder '81, Chairman of Board of RegentS. G phers Tie Diamond Due with Ohio tate Edw in L. Haislet '31Ed Board Seere,ary McCormick Testimonial Dinner Entered as second class matter at the post office in Mioneayolis, Minn.. under Aer of Conjlress of Mar~h 3, 1879., Annual. d.ues 0 the Association are $3 of whlCb $2 constitutes a year s subSCription '0 the MINNESOTA. Subscription for non·members: $4 per year, National ad· vertising represemative : Amencan Alumni Magazines Group, 22 Washing· AROUND AND ABOUT WITH THE ALUMNI 264 ,on Square N, New York II, N , Y.; phone GRamercy 5·2039, MAY-JUNE, 1950 243 Alumnus Subject of Newly Published Book Newest publication of the Minne sota Press, to be issued May 12, is a By EDWIN L. HAISLEY '3 1Ed book entided "The H. W . Wilson Director of Alumni Relations Co.," which tells the stOry of Halsey W . Wilson 1890-92, and the large bibliographical publishing house he heads. Before the rurn of the cenrury Wilson operated a Minneapolis camp A ,Cittle About tl ,Cot us bookstOre and he was one of the firSt twO persons to receive the Uni versJry s Outstanding Achievement Award, in 19 8. HE NEW REUNION PLAN has received much favorable comrnem from The book was written by lohtl L. T alumni everywhere. Two events of special interest and importance to all Lawler '40BA. Howard Haycraft grads and former srudems are the annual alumni day banquet May 19-with '28BA, is an H. W. Wilson vice pres i Harold Stassen as the main speaker, and the annual business meeting of the dem. Minnesota Alumni Association May 20th. Four Minnesota alumni recently Official Class Correspondents have been named and are now functioning. added to the Universiry Press Staff are Their jobs are to send in items of interest to alumni about members of their Doris Peterson Fra11klin '30BA, lanet own class, as well as other classes. Located throughout the country as they are Salisbury '31BA, Edith Seidel '47], and it will help the alumni office in bringing to you more new about your friends and lea1l Barck '48BA. and classmates. The New Plastic Life Membership Cards have brought in a Hood of letters from life members indicating their appreciation and thanks. It is the UNIVERSITY CENTER FOR same card as is Issued to annual members, except that it has been plasticized so it will not wear out-and, we hope, last a lifetime. CONTINUAliON STUDY ~ he Presidential Tour of Alumni D istricts in Minnesota has been most enthusiastically received by the people of the state, as well as our alumni. May 15-16-Marernal and Infam Healch Almost everywhere civic leaders and legislatOrs, whether alumni or not, have for Hospiral ursing taffs. welcomed President Morrill. The tOur has allowed the pres idem, not only to May 17-Cancer for Demists. May IS-20-Indusrrial Nursing. become acquainted with hundreds of our alumni, but to note the places of May IS-20-Library Instirute. responsibiliry and leadership they occupy tbroughom the state. It also has given fay 22-23- Care of the Premarure and him a chance to visit the people of the state and to become acquaimed with ewborn. Minnesota communities. In rurn, our alumni have had a chance to meet Presi May 22-26-Proctology, for general physi cians. dent Morrill, to hear him speak, to ask him questions. It can be said that our May 24-26-Warehouse Management Insti alumni in Minnesota now know our great president-and to know him is to rute. admire him. May 29·June 3 - Hospital Re reational A Testimonial D inner for Frank G. McCormick, Universiry adlletic Worker . director since 1931, who retires July 1, has been set for June 1 . Frank has a June 5-10-0perating Room Technic. June 12-16- ursery Care for Poliornrel· multitude of friends throughout the norrhwest and this will be their opporrun iri Patients. iry to pay him tribute for a grand job well done. The Alumni Association June 19-23-Dentistry for Children. co-sponsor with the Athletic Deparcment, Universiry and M lub. June 26- O-Otolaryngology for peciali t . SHORT COURSES NEW LIFE MEMBERS H oward A. Vogel '29B j'30MBj'31MD, N ew 1m, M inn. Following I a lisr of short cour es sponsored by the riculrural horr Course l)!Iiljord O. Gillett '32BA, t. P aul Office, UOI er iry Department of Agricul Robe,·t Lee Palmer '27LLB, Pipe cone, Minn. rure, to be given on the t. Paul campu June 3-Dairy Day ew annual m embers ( not renewals) - June 6-9-4·H lub Week March 1 to April 19, 1950 1 9 June 12-16- ork hop f r Agriculrure Ed ew a lU~ lI a l lII embers ( not renewal ) - ucation u pervisors ince Oce. 1, 1949 1, 8 June 1 -24 - Boy ' tate June _6·July 15- arkshop 10 Economic T otal MAA member h ip a of April 19 15, 5 Education June 24-Ro e Grower ' Day 244 MINNESOTA LETTERS * Peik Is Truly AGAINST NEW* * member of the Minnesota* Alumni Associ Minnesota Man REUNION TIME ation and I look forward to receiving the Alumni publication every month. ( See picture next pdge ) Following are excerpts from a letter Again thanks, and best wishes to you. received by Mrs. P. Dooley, correspond J. Ernest C. Linscheid '2900S Truly a product of the state of ent for the Class of 1910, from William J. Beulah, N . O. Minnesota and its University is Wes Hamilton '10BA, librarian of the Dayton, Ohio, public library. Mrs. Hamilton is the ley E. Peik 'llEd;'28PhD, dean of the former May l17essberg 'llBA. To the MAA: College of Education. Born in Clear "This is an advance excuse for the I thank you for my life membership brook, Minn., he attended both rural absence of May and myself from the card. and tOwn schools, earned twO of his fortieth reunion next month. Incidentally, Soon I will get in touch with Minnesota three degrees at Minnesota, taught in we don't like the plan of separating Alumni alumni in this communiry in the hope th'lt a rural school and was a superintendent Day from Commencement Week, at all, we may organize a MINNESOTA alumni in three MinnesOta towns and cities. although we are not staying away in a huff. club here. I will let you know. His master's is from Columbia Uni "We are having a sabbatical vacation Edith M. Patch 'OIBS after 14 years with the Dayton Public Box 150 versity. L;brary and sail on the Mauretania, April Orono, Maine 28, for the European summer we have This all gave him an ideal back dreamed of for years-England, the Isle of ground to serve education at the Uni Jersey, Southern Ireland, Scotland, and (he To the MAA : versity and throughout the state. But Orkneys, with August in Sweden and Nor Thank you for my life membership he has gained national stature fOt his way, then back to London for the Centen card. They are very nice, and ones that work outside, as well as inside Minne ary meeting of the Library Association of you can be proud to carry. I've met several sota. the United Kingdom at which I am to be Minnesota graduates in Van Nuys. They one of the representatives of the American have recognized my Minnesota nursing pin. At home and elsewhere, Dean Peik Library Association. Bessie C. Fox '26N has successfully championed improved "May joins me in sending greetings to Van Nuys, Calif. teacher training and a better element you, knowing you will pass them on to our friends of the old class when you meet. aryan high school curriculum. He h sounds incredible to think that 40 years was for two years chairman of the have rolled around since we left the cam· Cover Picture National Education Association's Na pus. We still think of you all with the old It would be easy on the eyes to tional Commission on Teacher Edu affection." W ill J. Hamil/on '10BA have as one's teacher any of this cation and Professional Standards and month's four cover girls. They were is now its honorary life chairman. nominees for selection as the Ideal FOR NEW REUNION TIME As last year's president of the Na Teacher to preside over the College of To the MAA : tional Association of Colleges for Education's Education Day festivities Teacher Education, he was a prime I have noted from an item on page 192 of (he March issue of MINNESOTA that April 27 . mover in the successful merger of that the alumni reunions of 1950 will be held The girls, all education seniors, are, body with twO similar groups. While during the month of May while the Uni building an outstanding faculty and left to right: versiry is functioning in full. I want to smdy program in his college, he has congratulate you and, through you , oth ~ r s Top-Shiela Spriggs, St. Paul; directed and participated in several who are responsible for making the ch:tnge from a summer month, when the Univers'ry Joyce Bubis, Minneapolis. BOttOm major educational surveys throughout is (0 some extent dormant, into (he month hidey McDonald, Wabasha, Minn.; the country. of May when the Universiry is in full Janna Oppegaard, Crookston, Minn. acrion. I think this is a sound improve· His right hand helper, according to ment. .. . The judges chose Janna Oppe the dean, is Marcia Edwards '31MA; Earl Constamine '06BA gaard as Miss Ideal Teacher. Gor '35PhD, the assistant dean. Her ad 488 Fourth Ave., ministrative duties give emphasis to New York, N . Y. don Soltau, physical education senior and football, basketball, and personal work with smdent govern ment and service organizations, and hockey player, was named Mr. Ideal LIFE MEMBERS she also teaches. COAST TO COAST Teacher. I shall be very proud to carry my life Shirley is studying home economics membership card. Thank you for sending education, the other girls, to teach at it. Splendid idea. the lower grade levels. Campus groups NEW JUDGES Emma G. Ericksol1 '23Ed 5328 Third Avenue S., nominating the four were: Shiela, Minnesota Governor Luther 111'. Minneapolis, Minn. Kappa Alpha Theta academic sorority; YOll17gdahl 1915-16, has appointed B. Joyce, Sigma Pi Omega professional M. Heinzell '27BA;28LLB of Ivanhoe, To the MAA : orority; Shirley, Home Economics and Victor P. Reim '22 BA;'27LLB. This is to thank you for the life mem Association; and Janna, Eta igma New Ulm, to be judges of the ninth bership card you sent me recently- it's nice to know that I am a paid up life Upsilon honorary education society. Minnesota judicial di trict. MINNESOTA VOICE OF THE ALUMN I Vol. 49 No.9 MAY-JUNE, 1950 ?M ~etteIt S~ BETTER EDUCATION Became better educati01~ is now required for entry to 1learly every programs of liberal education and ber occupational field, the supplying of qtlalified instmctors and educational ter technical training in rhe theory and planners and administrators has grown to great importatlce. practices of reaching. It is conscienti The University College of Education has so striven to meet the need ously and progressively raising irs for training i'n education that it is a national leader. The College is big to standards of selection and graduarion. meet the pressing 1leed for more and more teachers for schools and col Professional and general courses are leges and for adult education. It's good i11 its strict requirement for schol selected for their functional applica astic achievement and in the quality of its faculty. Its broad program serves the state alld nation both on and off the camp tis. tion and the liberal education of the individual stems from the program of studies of the enti.re University. B" W. E. PEIK 'llEd,.'28PhD University regent. This course was Other current lines of emphasis in Dean, College of Education lengthened to a four-year degree elude more intensive planning and course in 1899. supervision of student teaching and "A DEPARTMENT of theory The College itself was estab the development of internship in con and practice of elementary lished in 1905. From its small nection with five-year curricula. Ot education"-with these words the beginnings it has become a major the least of the items of present inter TerritOrial ACt of 1851 ineluded the college of the University, one of est in the College of Education is the preparation of teachers as one of the the top schools of the nation in projected first unit of the College of areas in which the new University enrollment, educational research, would serve the people of the Terri leadership, and service. tory and future tate of Minnesota. Although teacher education was thus Must Meet Expansion specified as one of five "deparrments" initially listed by the TerritOrial Legis In serving the people of the state lature, it was not until President Fol it has become the job of the College well recommended the appointment of Education to provide leader hip in of a "normal professor" that the firSt the production of better-prepared organized effort tOward teacher prepa teachers for an expanding elementary ration was made. and secondary school system in Minne In 1881 Professor Maria Sanford, sota. The development of deparrments one of the most distinguished of early for the training of teachers of the so Staff members, gave an optional cour e called .. pecial fields " SUell as mu ic, of lectures on the theory of teaching. art, physical education, recreation, in Beginning in 1885 a similar course dustrial education, agricultural educa was offered by Profe sor Henry Pratt tion, home eCOf.lOmics education, and Judson, who later became a di tin business education has progressed ide guished president of the Uni ersity by side with the preparation of ac of hicago. A department offering tWO ademic teachers, chool admini tratOr , years of training for high school and upervisors. .teachers was established under Dr. urrently the college pia ing Education has its lighter moments. as witness a bit of banler between Marcia Kiehle, who had been, ucces ively, a more emphasis that it has lD the past Edwards '31 MA;'35PhD, assistant dean college professor, a Minnesota state on the preparation of elementary of education, and Wesley E. Peik 'II Ed; superintendent of education, and a school teachers-te, cher with broad '28 PhD, the dean, 2 6 MlNNE OTA Education buildwgs, which will house a demonstration and experimental high school, made possible by a build ing grant from the 1949 legislature. Trains for Wide Field The College of Education, in co operation with the Institute of Child elfare, the Graduate cllool, and four laboratOry chools enrolls a tu dent body ranging from the twO- and three-year-olds in the nur ery school to po t-doctoral students and in-service teachers of practically every age. For education is as broad as life; it in cludes many types of profes ional activity--classroom teaching, supervi sion, administration, research, or specialized educational services. You can find among it gradu ate not only elementary and econdary chool teachers but col lege administratOrs and teachers, hospital teacher, superintend- ent of metropolitan school In his practice teaching at University High School, James D. Chapman, Sr., uni ersity athletic coaches ex education senior, relates a geometrical theorem about angles to practical use in tension teachers in farm com building construction. Kay Klinkerfues is the student. Theodore Kellogg , supervis munities and community recrea ing teacher, is at the rear. tion directors, among Others. ere you to spend some time to sample one of a dozen departments, graduate assi tants would be working sampling the education activitie nec you might run into a class playing a on anyone of the many re earch pro essary in the training of teachers for foreign game using French, pan ish, jects of the Bureau of Educational modern chool, you would be im German, or Russian as their language, Research-more basic re earch than pres ed by their scope and frequently or you might find students listening the field studies and sur ey ervices surprised by the unexpected. In the to foreign language records designed involve. to teach languages indi idually. Of Institute of Child Welfare you would rudy Goes A.6.eld encoumer little tOrs listening to course the more conventional class stOrie, playing with tOys, eating procedures which you knew are pres To complete the tOur of teacher lunches, or sleeping on COts. Child ent tOO, bur there is far more use of education, you would ha e to visit me growth and developmem is studied as library books, more group work, more hospitals, the physical education the children are being educated-and pupil planning and participation. You plants, art and music studios, down as teachers for children of their age could find carefully prepared evalua tOwn department tOres, industrial group are being trained. tion data which show that University plants, state high chool, farms, and I High chool students achieve very community center. Here student get Rodeo for Reading well, are successful in college, and are aluable out-of-cia s comacts and com A first grade might be planning a being oriented to life problems on a munity-laboratory experience. rodeo for the "parentS' evening at higber information level than you Thi doe nOt nearly exhaust po i chool," while learning to read quicker, ere. bilities, and all the while me basic and on a freer more individualized In BurtOn Hall you might encounter general education, the most important instructional basis than you did in a doctOral examination; while across equipment any teacher must have, i your own childhood. tepping into the the hall graduate students as emble a going on with hundreds of students adjacent hild tudy Center, you voluminous survey report, complete every hour of the day in me be t might encounter special instruction of with school population dot maps, manner of the entire ni er ity. All orne child with a deficiency of sight aerial photOgraphs, and careful statis this is involved. Unle s the educational or hearing. From a darkened class tical analyses prepared a a service to and the tecllnlcal-profes ional program room through a one-way screen you a MinnesOta school di trict. earby of the teacher makes what is good till could follow closely the administra several studem counselors would be better, the teaching profe sion is 10 - tion of a special achievemem or in busy as isting some of the 2,200 under ing ground in a world that expect telligence te t, wim a copy of the graduate tudents with their special more and more--much more than tile te t projeCted on a screen before you. educational, and sometimes personal, "three R's"--of the teachers and In the niversity High choo!, just problems. Ot far from here, other schools of tOday. 24 MAY-JUNE, 1950 means by which the Bureau is con rributing to the alleviation of the 180 On Education Staff shorrage of elemenrary school teachers. By Boardman as president of the orrh The Bureau's test development re search consists of activities in rbe JOR E. DOBB! '42Ed;'49 IA Cenrral Association of Colleges and measurement of teachers' attitudes to Re earch Fellow Secondary Schools, Dr. Pa/mer John son as vice president of rbe American ward children; evaluation of students' F YOU were to visit a full College Association for rhe Advancement of preferences as indicative of their own I of Education Staff meeting you cience, Dr. Ella Rose '27MS, head of life goals; development of appraisal would see roughly 110 of 180 voting rhe Minnesota Vocational Association. instruments for gauging cerrain teach members in arrendance. An inreresting Orher staff members serving as na ing competencies; invention of tech ob er ation would undoubtedly be rhe tional presidents were Homer]. Smith, niques for rating the appreciational democratic manner in which Dean indusrrial teacher rrainers; Dr. Carl value of art products; a comparative Peik conduces such meetings and rhe Nordly, healrh, physical education and investigation of several means for de manner in which faculry "gi e and recreation; Dr. Ray Price, business termining the educational needs of take" is used coosrructively. teachers; Dr. Paul Grim, student adults in a communiry; and deyelop In addition to the 180 staff mem teaching director . ment of diagnostic silent reading rests. bers, ranging from instructOr to full Again rhis list is incomplete but it This last endeavor repre entS pioneer profes or, there are currently 63 re work in group measurement of word serves to indicate the qualiry of per search and teaching assi tams who pro sons who, when grouped tOgerber 1 0 recognition difficulties of children. vide aluable services to the College strong, make up the College of Edu whtle pursuing their graduate srudies. Results P ublished cation faculry. The publications program of the rodent Attracted Bureau has twO chief purpo es : to It is impractical here to list all of carry rbe findings of research to the the Staff members who have made Research Is in profe sional teacher in every com significant contributions to education muniry, and to di eminate among in Minnesora and rhe nation. Almost orber research worker the newly de wirbout exception each department School Setting veloped investigational procedure and has a drawing power rhat arrracts sru By techniques appropriate for the study dents from every state and from many CYRIL]. HOYT '3 IA:'+lPhD of educational problem . Two eries foreign land and repre entatives in of profe ional monographs, fodem Associate Director rhe educational leadership of the chool Practices and rudies in Edu Bureau of Educational Research nation. cation, ha\'e been e tabli hed. For example, people all over the HE program of the Bureau of country will know well rhe work of T Educational Re earch coosi t of Leo Brueckner in arithmetic, Guy rwo major rypes of activities-research Ed Student Conduct Bond in reading, Romer J. mith and publication. All of rhe Bureau' 12-College Conference '22 fA ;'26PhD, in indusrrial educa re earch endeavors are brought to tion; Dora V. mith '16BA;'19MA; focu upon one of rhe College's chief College of Education rudents learn '28PhD, in Engli h; alter ook in concern. impro emenes in rbe educa by doing not only in their practice testing, John E. Anderson in pre tion and rraining of teacher for the teaching but "on theu own" in annual school education, Oara Brown Arne elementary and econdary chool of student planned and conducted con in home economics education, Edgar rhe commonwealth. ince the modern ference . esley in social stud ie, . Gilbert concept of educational research nece - nder ponsor hip of the ollege's Wrenn in rudent personnel work, sitate the investigation of practical rudent interm~ary board a tudent Charles Boardman and elson Boss problems in their 1I ormal erring, the commirree joined with repre entatives ing in secondary education, Palmer Bureau' laboratOry encomp e many of 11 other finne ora and i coosin Johnson '21Ag;'26MA;'2 PhD, JO participating schools. teacher training college thi year and statistical re earch technique . 15 last in conducting a teaching problem Head National Group The current re earch activitie of conference on the finne ora campu . Anorher intere ting ob ervation of the Bureau, for example, include 15 Thi rear' two-day meeting w at Educational taff member can be major rudie conducted cooperatively tended by 200 tudent from the 12 gained rhrough a glimpse at rhe num with member of the iosrructional participating colle e. tudent were ber of national officer in educational faculty. everal studie in teacher rhe major peaker in a erie of panel a ociations during the pa t ear. morale are in e tigating the intra discus ion . with a limited number of Heading the li t auld be Dean Peik per anal, inter-per anal and environ faculty member taking pan by invi who erved a pre ident of the mental factor related to teacher ' de tation. n inter-colle e commmee al American A sociation of olleges for ci ion to remain in or to leave the ready i at work on ne .~ t rear' meet- Teacher Education, Dr. harle profe ion. The e rudie repre ent one 10 . 248 MINNESOTA College Provides Varied Services By WILLIAM J. MICHEELS '38MA;'41 PhD Associate Professor, Industrial Education I T IS interesting and illuminating as one endeavors to list the many services which the College of Educa tion offers to individuals, schools and communities in the state as well as to agencies outside of Minnesota. The activities of the Placement Bureau, the Bureau of Educational Research, and the Bureau of Field Studies and Surveys are briefly des cribed in other articles in this issue. Let's look now at a few of the other services rendered by the College, its departments, and its personnel. Industria l e ducation stude nts from t he Colleg e of Edu cation freque ntly demon strate industrial processes to teacher groups in Minn esota communities. He re, Child Study Center members of t he Industrial Edu cation C lub rehearse a d e monstration of t he si lk The newest addition to the College screen printi ng process for prese nta tion to the Southwestern In d ust rial Arts C lub is the Child Study Center located in at Mountain Lake. Left to ri ght: Don Poeschl , na rrator; Elmer Lundgren a nd John Novaczyk, inki ng the screen; a nd W a lter Kozub, cutting a ste ncil. Pattee Hall, the former Law building. Dr. Harold A. Delp is the director of the Center which provides service to cialists, industrial education teachers some 200 schools have attended dur Minnesota children who have "educa and similar groups. ing the past three years. tional and adjustment problems." In O ff Campus Services Another type of service is that pro addition, the Center staff trains teach In any given week College of Edu vided industry by the Department of ers to assist in handling exceptional cation staff members will be found Industrial Education. Typical of this children and it conducts research in out in the state working with school activity is the program of H . T. Wid related educational problems. administratOrs, meeting with teacher dowson '26Ag; '38MA, associate pro More than 4,000 teachers and stu groups, conducting conferences, or fessor of industrial education. In a dent teachers have observed clinical talking at community gatherings. single week he may be teaching an demonstrations in the specially equip One of the most interesting of these undergraduate class, groups of factOry ped rooms and booths which are con activities is the "circuit teacher" idea foremen studying employe training, a structed so that the children do not wherein the College goes Out to its graduate 'campus class on conference know they are being observed. Read srudents, usually teachers, in five or leadership, vocational teachers in St. ing difficulties, partial deafness, emo six different communities. During the Paul or Faribault, and a University tional disturbances-these are common week a staff member will spend a day personnel class in conference leade; examples of the types of problems in each community working with the ship, or consulting with a conference handled in the Center. teachers and conducting an organized of personnel officials. afternoon or evening class that is It has not been possible to grant all Schoolrnen's Week taken for scholastic credit of the requests that have been made One of the best known state-wide Two examples point up additional for the use of staff members in foreign conferences of the College is the an services of this type. Dr. Willis E. assignments although the College has nual Schoolmeo's Week, scheduled Dllga1/ '39MA; '42PhD, director of endeavored to cooperate as fully as each spring during the Easter recess srudent personnel, has been holding possible. Among those who have of the public schools. This conference one-day guidance workshops in many served as consultants to our occupation was started in 1914. areas of the state, at which teachers forces in Germany are Dr. Leo J. Specialized subject matter confer in a certain area come together for Brueckner, Dr. Homer]. mith '22- ences will be found in session on the discussion of common problems in MA;'26PhD, Dr. William J. Micheels, campus almost any week during thf srudent guidance. Approximately 4,- and Dr. Miles E. Cary. Dr. M. G. school year for English teachers 000 superintendents, principals, coun Neale served in a similar capacity as mathematics teachers, visual aids spe selors, and cla sroom teacher from an educational adviser in Korea. 249 MAY·J UNE, 1950 '29PhD, chancellor, University of New Alumni Serve 1n York; George Selke '16Ed, chancellor, Surveys Aid to University of Montana; Verne Fryk· School D· stricts Many Major Posts Lund '33PhD, president, Stout I~ti. tute, Menominee, Wis.; Howard Jones By OTTO E. DOjUlA '29MA '33Ed ;'36MA, president, Teachers' Col· Associate Director College of Education alumni are lege, Plymouth, N . H.; James . M. Bureau of Field Studies and urveys conducting and advancing activity in Hllghes '24PhD, dean of Education. HE Bureau of Field rudies and instruction, administration and re· Northwestern University; Ernest Mel· T urveys was established in ep search throughout MinnesOta. Their by '26MA;'28PhD, dean, ew York tember 1948. The major purpose of positions range from neop~yte teach· University; H enry H . Kroenenberg the de~artment is to make field studies ers meeting their first tests 1D the field '35PhD, dean of education, University and surveys of school plants, finances, to college presidents and heads of state of Arkansas; Melva Lind '25BA;'43 enrollments educational programs or· education departments. MA, secretary, American Association ganization, and other related facts for of University Women; Roben Maaske Following are the names and posi· individual school districts. The de· '38PhD, president, College of Educa· tions of only a few of the alumni partment, through these activities. i? tion, Le Grande, Ore.; Horace T . whose accomplishments reflect special which graduate students are paruo· ,'iforse '28BA;'30MA;'39PhD, dean, credit on their alma mater: pants, gives training to graduate stu General College, University of Minne· dents in educational administration. W. E. Peik 'l1Ed;'28PhD, dean of sOta. Surveys are made at the request of a the University College of Education; school district and are covered by can· Marcia Edwards '31 MA;'35PhD, as· tracts between the regents of the Uni· sistant dean; Dean M. Schweickhard Placement Bureau versity of Mianesota and the local '27MA, Minnesota state commissioner board of education. of education; T. ]. Berning '27Ed ;'32- Does Important Job School building survey have re· MA, assistant commissioner Selmer By CLIFFORD P. A RCHER cently been completed for the school Berg '24MA, school superintendent, D irector districts at Ortonville, r. Peter. and Oakland, Calif.; Henry Harmon '35- Bureau of Recommendations Winona in MinnesOta and for Yank· PhD, president, Drake University; "CAN YOll tell me where I can ton and Mitchell in outh Dakota. B1Id Wilkimon '37BA (UC), coach, fi17d a college physics teacher?" Preliminary report have been made Oklahoma University; Edwi11 L. Hais· " lY/ill you recommend a teacher of for t. Paul and Independent chool let '31Ed, University director of alumni speech?" "Please STlggest a man for District Number 3, a new large can· relations; G. Lester Anderson. '41- dean of instruction." ''It? ill yOtl recom· solidated districr of Ramsey County PhD, dean of teacher education, New mend a superintendent for our school with other studies being in proce s York City's four city colleges; George system?" for these twO school sy terns. mith '29Ed;'30MA, dean, Kansas These and many more que tions University. pour into the Bureau of Recommenda· Graduate Program Claude Eggertsen '39PhD, education tions from all 4 tates, U. . terri· professor, University of Michigan and tories, and from foreign countrie . Gains Importance secretary of National Association of The Bureau of Recommendation B , IARCIA EDll'l ARD allege Teachers; Victor H. 011 '27 ser e a liai on function between the MA; '29PhD, education head, Michi· '31 IA,"35PbD employing official of school di trict , A i tane Dean gan tate ollege; Arwood orthby and colleges and univer itie and grad. College of Education '22 BA, vice president, Univer ity of uating tudents and alumni of the ince 1917. when the firSt doctor of onnecticut; Willard Olsoll '20Ed;'24. Univer ity. phil ophy degree with a major in MA;'26PhD, education profe sor, Uni· 84 Placed versity of Michigan; H e1l/"y ]. Otto education wa awarded at the niver urrent graduate and former grad. sity of Minne ota, graduate work has '27MA; '31PhD, education profe or, uate are using the ser ice of the Univer ity of Texas; hailer PeterSOIl become one of the main jobs of the Bureau to secure the fir t po ition and allege of Education faculty. our es '44PhD, executive director, American for nex po itions "hen · eeking ad· Dental Association; 1Y/illiam D, Reel'e and re earch program at the graduate ancement. Teachers, college and uni· level are designed to meet the need '24PhD, Teachers' College pr fes or, ver ity in trucror , and ch 1 and Columbia Univer ity; Dapid Ryans of man}' types of chool workers- college administrators are utilizing ch 01 p ychologi t, coun elor, ad· '33MA; '37PhD. professor. Uni ersity Bureau er ice . of alifornia, at Los Angeles. mini trator, upervi or, direct r of In 19 9, 8 4 alumni and current training in teacher' allege. curricu· Ernest W. Tiegs '21MA;'27PhD, graduate secured p ition. A total of lum dire tOr, c llege taH member in dean. School of Education, Uni er ity 6, 5 vacancie in teaching ere re· teacher edu ation. educational re earch of outhern alifornia; James G. U m· p ned and 12.1 1 ets of credentials worker, and teacher of elementary Jtatld '30PhD, education profes or, were furnished employer for ap· and ec ndary chool ubject. University of Texas; Alvin . ETlrich prai al. ( ontinued on page 256) 250 MINNESOTA (U' Alumni Build Ice Unit for Williams Arena C ONSTRUCTION of the eleetri- The company built the electric cal equipment for freezing the motOrs and controls for the twO big new ice rink in Williams Arena had compressors which condense gas for extra special attention at the Electric freezing the ice. The fum specializes Machinery Manufacturing Co. in making large electric power appar To a goodly share of the firm 's per atus and controls. The University, in sonnel, it was a chance to show their cidentally, has found no fault with former instructOrs how much they the Williams Arena equipment. learned at Minnesota. More than 40 Olson Made P resident H , '19EE, recently was of the company's officers and employes R . Olson promOted to president of the firm, from the president on down are gradu from vice president and sales man ates of the Universiry, mostly from the ager. A. P. Burris '28EE, was named College of Engineering. Quite a few to succeed him as vice president and of them are rabid hockey fans and sales manager. R. H. Ol so n Williams Arena is only about a mile Other Minnesota graduates who from the Electric Machinery plant. hold tOp jobs in the firm are I . C. Bemon '25EE, chief electrical engi neer; E. H. Jernberg '40MechE, chief Optical Firm Has Employed mechank al engineer; G. L. Oscarson '22EE, chief application engineer; F. W. H otchkiss '18EE, secretary-treas Journalism Grads for 11 Years urer; C. C. N elson '2 5EE, works man N ITS nearly 11 years of operation, ent editor. ager; and S. P. Bordeau '2 5EE, I The Kindy Forum, industrial publi Anderson is now sales manager of advertising and sales promotion man cation of the Kindy Optical Co., St. the Kindy organization. Miss StOner ager. Paul, has had six editOrs. All of them now is a member of the editOrial staff As Minneapolis district engineer, have been graduates of the Universiry of Better Homes and Gardens, and R. H , K lttscher '36EE, cllecked the of Minnesota School of Journalism. Miss Kirschner, now Mrs. John Allen, equipment after installation. The Forum , a is director of public relations for the Other MinnesOtans with Electric monthly, is distri Universiry's Extension Division. Dor Machinery, all electrical engineering buted in all 48 othy Thorp is executive secretary of graduates except as designated, are: states, the U. S. the St. Paul Figure Skating Club, and P. L. A ndersotl '16, H. J. Basil '46, C. M. territories, and Miss Hellie is now Mrs. H . A. Blandin, Bllrns '38, L. A . B1Ishay '48, Milton Comp C a n a d a. It runs a housewife. Ion '28, R . J. Corbett ' 7, P. A . Dllrkee '43 , from 18 to 24 During Miss Hellie's editOrship, J. S. Fergllso n ' I, R . G reen '39BusA, K . L. The Kindy Forum received the an H anson '38, ]. R . Imbertson '4 5, I. H. JOhll The company, an nual award of the Northwestern In SOli '43, E. IF". Kammerer '36, R . B. Ki'ls pages. ~~~~~§~ organization having dustrial Edi tors' Association, the area man '48, O. C. Lee '19, John Mons01J '4 5, ~ 14 branches and recognition by the N ational Industrial O. E. Olsoll '45, A . C. Pel rich '19, llV. O. a1lby , IMechE, Geo rge Savage '48BusA, Alden operations over Council. In Miss StOner's regime, the five mid - western magazine was awarded the annual Red N. G. ellalld '4B, H. N. 01l1 111er' 3, E. Cross citation for outstanding service 117. u'all son ' 19, P. N. Su'a llstrom. 'OB, G. states, has regularly made it a policy E. 'Swifl '23, H. T . Thompson '16, H. 117. in the publishing field , another na to employ graduates of the Universiry Thompso n '44, and P. C. V eek '47. tional recognition. when possible. It apparently has been Another Minnesota alumnus who Other Minnesota alumni in the well satisfied with this policy in the had a big share in the growth of Electric operation of its trade publication. Kindy general offices in St, Paul are Machinery was C. Tmmall Hibbard Successively, the editOrs have been Roger David 1948-49, industrial '97EE, chief and consulting engineer R obert L. Anderson '39, Emily L 01f representative; Noel Parmental, Jr., for the fum from 1897 to 19 5. He H ellie '43, Geraldine Stoner '47, Mar 1949-50Gr, public relations director; jorie Kirschner '47, Do'ro/hy Thorp and V erda Bra1~ ch 1932-43, the com was a pioneer in the development of '47, and Virginia Alden '49, the pres- pany's comptroller. synchronous motors. MAY-JUNE, 1950 251 T HE UNIVERSITY of Minnesota has one honor which it gives only to its alumni-the Outstanding Achievement Award. It is presented for exceptional achievement in the recipient'S fields of endeavor. This year's award will be made at the annual Alwnni Reunion May 18, 19 20. OUTST ANDING ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Th e 1950 WINNER HAROLD E. STASSEN '27BA; '29LLB President of the University of Pennsyl arua Former Governor of Minnesota Builder for Wodd Peace At the Alumni Day dinner Friday evening, May 19, Alumni to receive the Outstanding Achie ement University Pre idem J. L. Morrill will present to Award are chosen annually by the University Board President Stassen a medal and citation in recognition of Regents on the basis of recommendations by me of his signal accomplishments in government and University Honors Commirree, as approved by the human welfare The event will be a highlight of the program, together with the principal address to be Administrative ommirree, which i composed of dean given by President tassen. and department directors. HAROLD E_ T A EN Stassen's first achievements to win widespread Then followed several widely read wrmng on in recognition were as the youthful three-time governor ternational affair and activity in the national affair of Minnes ta. Notable accomplish ments of his admin of the Republican party, including his candidacy for istration were a material red uction in the state debt the Republican nomination for president. He be ame and enactment of a labor-management peace la . In president of the niversity of Pennsylvania, one of the his World War II Navy service, for which he resigned nation's great and influential educational institutions, the governorship, he rose to the rank of captain on in 19 Admiral Halsey's executive taff and received tile Legion of Merit Bronze tar and six battle stars. Lesser known i the fact ras en erved as a vice He won additional esteem among hi feUov Ameri president of the orrhern Bapti t Con ention in 19 L can in his service a a United tate delegate to the was president for e eral year of me International first United ation onference in an Francisco. Council of Religious Education, and received the Newspaper corre pondents named hIm as one of the orld Chri tian Endea or ciration for di tingui hed twO outstanding delegates from any nation repre ented. public servi e in 19 1. MAY 18-19 - 20 TO BE BIG ALUMNI DAYS TTRA TED by an expanded e ion on both the Minneapoli and e Featur A program and the presence of t. Paul canlpu es is developing keen Harold E. tassell '27BA;'_9LLB. as intere t. The ne feature the campu the principal speaker, a rec rd attend tOur and reek letter and d rmit ry Advan e re ervation and inquirie ance i anticipated for the 1 50 open hues b th Ma 1 and 1 will indicate large number f alwnni will al umni reunio n May 18-19-20 on the pro ide direct COntact \ ith the faculty pani ipate in the ap and own Day Minneapolis campu . and rudent , a will the tudenr- functi n , including th eniot lunch Iwnni-Faculty tea 1a 1 , Alumni T he opportunity to enj oy a th ree eon, May 18. The G Iden Anniver ary Day. The la e of 19_5 and 19'5 day alwnni pr gram and al 0 vi it lunche n of the la f 1900 wi ll be ill have r union 1ay 1 ,nd the das e and 1. b ratOrie in re war that day. niver ity f Minne ota lumnae 252 MINNESOTA Club will be host to the Old Grad Class of 1900 fiftieth anniversary luncheon. luncheon Thursday noon and the gen Three Receive Alumni D ay will conclude with the eral reunion banquet Friday evening, annual reunion banquet at which according to Ross Bates, Minneapolis, (U' Fellowships Stassen, now the president of the Uni member of the arrangements commit versity of Pennsylvania, will be the tee. The others of the committee are NRESTRl TED GI FTS by principal speaker and receive the Uni Kay T odd, chairman; Walter Mayo, U alumai and friends of the Uni versity's Outstanding Achievement and George Rogers, all of St. Paul, vetsity in the past year will help sup Award. and Francis Bean, Charles Smith, and port the continuing education of three The annual spring football game in Ralph Boardma1t, Minneapolis. outstanding graduate students at the Memorial Stadium and additional University next college year. campus tours will be the entertain 200 Reconunended Selected from 90 applicants, the ment features May 20. Business of the three have been awarded Greater UOl For Scholarships Minnesota Alumni Association will be versity Fellowships for 1950-5l. Two conducted at the MAA annual meet ITH approximately 200 per of them hold Minnesota degrees. Funds ing luncheon and a dinner meeting of W sons recommended for con fot the three fellowships will come the association executive committee. sideration, the University Scholatship from the MAA sponsored Greater Committee was scheduled to meet University Fund. The three fellowship May 3 to begin selection of some 90 winners are: Banquet to Be of them to receive scholarships at the Howard M. Robbins of Man University next year. torville, Minn., who is majoring Festive Affair About 40 of the awards will be in physics. Alumni Freshman Scholarships, £thanc Francis E. Rourke of Hamden, The big blow-off of the 1950 alumni ed through the Greater University Conn., majoring 10 political reunion, replete with good fellowship, Fund, and the remainder will be science. noise, and color, plus an outstanding Josephine 1. Merriam Scholarships Glenn E. Tyler of St. Paul, address, will be the annual alumni from the University. The exact num majodng in history. dinner in Coffman Union's main ball ber of scholarships to be given will In reporting the choices made by room. Arthur 0, Lampland '30BusA; depend upon the amounts of the avail '34LLB, president of the MAA, will the Committee on Selection, Dean able funds to be allocated to individual be tOastmaster. Theodore C. Blegen of the Graduate winners. School, committee chairman, said : Harold E. Stassen '27BA;'29LLB, "Working with 90 applications, the president of the University of Penn The 200 candidates were recom c0mmittee found that no fewer than sylvania, wi ll be the principal speaker. mended by the MAA scholarship 36 were distinctly superior." He is recognized not only as an ex committees in the association's 18 Robbins received his bachelor de ceptionally able man in public affairs, districts in Minnesota from applica gree with "high distinction" from the but a highly accomplished public tions submitted to them. All the candidates are high school graduating University in 1947 and a master's in speaker. He always has something 1948. He has been a Minnesota gradu seniors this year, except a couple of worthwhile to say and he says it well. ate student since 1947. last year's graduates As a part of the dinner program, Rourke has his bachelor and University President J. 1. Morrill will Previous to the May 3 meeting, master's degrees from Yale Univer present to Stassen the University's George B. Risty '40MA, University sity. Tyler. a fotmer department super Outstanding Achievement Award. director of student loans and scholar visor in the First N ational Bank of ships, classified and summarized the Minneapolis, has been a teaching as 1900 Law Grads to Have records on each candidate for com sistant in the University Department mittee evaluation. of History and a histOry instructor in Reunion Dinner May 18 The former University SCholarship the Extension Division. Class of 1900 alumni of the Law ommittee, composed of three repre chool will have their golden anni sentatives, each, of the MAA and Uni New Philo ophy Periodical: Phil versary banquet Thursday, May 18, in versity, was augmented this year by osophi cal tudies, a new periodical conjunction with the general alumni addition of cwo Minnesota school devoted to analytical philosophy, has reunion. The banquet will be at 6 superintendents, R. llV. Bergst1'om been launched at the University, with p.m. in the Minneapolis Athletic lub, , OMA, Hutchinson, president of the publication by the University Press. with an expected attendance of 20 Minnesota Association of econdary The editOrs are Prof. Herbert Feigl from points as far away as the Pacific ch 01 Principals; and James K. and Assoc. Prof. Wilfrid ellars. COast. Michie '36MA, Hibbing, president of both of the University Department of Members of the 1900 law class alo the Minnesota Council of School Phil sophy. The magazine will appear plan to attend in a body the general Executives. six times during the school year. 253 MAY-JUNE, 1950 30,000 By 1963 7~ Rei. "Barring war or recession the campuses in Minneapolis and c. Paul will have a 1963 enrollment exceed ing 30,000 students. Is the University tOO big-too cosdy? More attention Ateu1Uei is paid the individual student now than was tbe case 15 years ago. Is the best tOO good for your son or daugh ~ ter as a Minnesota citizen?" Besides its expanding instructional program, Dr. Morrill called attention Morrill Enjoyed His Tour; of his listeners to the University'S part in the "upgrading of the agri cultural economy of the state," .that So Did Alumni the University qualifies as "one of the By VI CE RBIS 1941-47 GR Bemidji, Disc. 14; Thief River Falls, five or six leading medical cemers, the MAA Field Representative Dist. 13; Fargo-Moorhead, Dist. 12; development of mining processes for and Alexandria Dist. 8. low grade iron ore, and other services to the general public as well as to NIVERSITY ALUMNI in 11 Most Significant students." Minnesota communities had a U "Before I ever thought of coming Ed Haislet, University directOr of rousing good time and so did Univer to the University I realized that the alumni relations, who accompanied sity Presidem J. L. Morrill when he University of Minnesota was the most Dr. Morrill to the Minnesota meet met with and addressed alumni dinner sigsificam state university in this ings, introduced him at several and meetings in the 11 cemers during land," Dr. Morrill told his Rochester oudined current activities and plans March and April. audience. of the MAA. Describing mounting The assemblies were sponsored by interest of alumni in the MAA, he the local Minnesota alumni dubs, with "Some alumni are critical because reporred the assOClauon obtained the assistance of the MAA field office. they want the university to stay as it nearly 11 000 new annual members in Sevemeen hundred alumni, husbands was and as they remember it. The the past year. and wives attended. Besides address test of an alumnus is his ability to ing the meetings, Presidem Morrill grow in understanding of the Uni He described plans for the organiz met the individual alumni at informal versity." ation of additional alumni dubs in receptions in each town and vi ited 'The university now is in a period Minnesota, the continued improve with alumni and other tOwnsmen in of transition," he said. ment of the alumni magazine, circu "bull sessions" before and after the "During the war it was an arsenal lation of Minnesota football mo ies scheduled evems. of military training. Now, during the The tOwns visited and the alumni post-war years an enormous readjust At the head table at the Rochester, districts from whid1 they drew at ment is called for. ... We are chal Minn., club meeting for President Mor tendance were: Marshall, Dist. 6; lenged to find the Staff and the space rill. left to right, were: Dr. Morrill, William J. Cooper '4I BA, club presi PipestOne, Disr. 5; Fairmom, Disc. 4; and facilities to do the largest job dent; A. J. Lobb ' 12LLB, University New Uim Disc. 3; Sc. Cloud, Disc. 9; the University has ever been called regent and Mayo Clinic official; and Rochester, Dist. 1; Hibbing, Dist. 15 ; on to perform. . . . Mr•. Morrill. 254 MINNESOTA to alumni clubs, and additional services. At Morrill Meetings Brief notes follow on some of the earlier of the 11 Morrill meetings. MARSHALL Despire bad roads, 110 persons anended rhe Marshall meering, for which Sruarr E. MacDonald was chairman. A novel fea rure was rhe broadcasring of rhe daily radio program of Counry Agriculrural Agenr F. ]. Meade '40Ag, from rhe banquer hall, permining Dr. Morrill ro be inrer viewed on rhe broadcasr. PIPESTONE lr/alter C. Benjamin '18BS;'20MB;'2 1- MD, presided ar rhe Pipesrone meering for Presidenr Morrill, anended by 90 alumni and guesrs. Ar a business session of rhe Pipesrone alumni club, Dr. Benjamin was elecred presidenr. (See separare srory.) FAIRMONT Alumni of rhe Fairmonr area were con grarulared by Dr. Morrill for rheir many leadership services ro rhe communiry life of rheir counry. More rhan 100 persons anended rhe Fairmonr reception and di n ner, wirh Robert McCune '09BA;' llLLB, as toastmaster. Sixteen members of the Mounrain Lake, Minn., alumni club, at tended the Fairmonr reception and dinner. N EW ULM Joining with the local alumni at the New Vim meeting to honor Presidenr Mor rill were alumni from Redwood Falls, Pipestone Mankato, Sleepy Eye, St. Peter, and Spring field . The anendance totaled 98 persons. Ted FritJche '28BS;'30YIB;'3 1MD, was toastmaster. State Senaror John M . Zwach '33Ed, of Milroy, a guest at the dinner, was complimenred by President Morrill for his work on the state senate education com minee. ST. CLOUD Eighty alumni and friends anended the Sr. Cloud receprion and dinner, despite srormy weather and ice sheeted highways. The education comminee of the St. Cloud Chamber of Commerce co-sponsored rhe assembly with the St. Cloud alumni club. tate Representative Dewey Reed '3 BS, was praised by Dr. Morrill for his suppOrt of legislation for education. Don L. Neer . lEd;' 7MEd, presided. Preceding the dinner, President Morrill visited Ray Quin lIvan, Universiry regent, in the hospital where he was a patient. ROCHESTER H e~ d t ~ bl e gu ests ~ t three ~ Iumn i club dinners for President Morrill were, A . J. Lobb ' 12LLB, a regenr of the Uni versiry and administrative director of the left to right: Mayo linic, was roastmaster at rhe Ro chester dinner, anended by 150 alumni and MARSHALL-J ~ m es von W i ll i~ m s '03BA ;' 05LLB , MAA District 6 c h ~i rm ~ n ; rheir guests. Bill Cooper '4 IBA, Ro hester Dr. Morr ill , Ed H ~ i s l et, MAA exe c. se c.; Stu ~ rt M~ c Don~ld '42Ed, club presi dent. club president, introduced President Mor FAIRMONT- Rob ert McCune '09BA ;' II LLB , to~stmast e r ; Dr, Morrill ; Mrs. Mc rill. J n the cou rse of his talk, Dr. Morrill Cune. PIPESTONE- Mrs , M ~rs h ~ 1I Houts (M ary O. D e~ ly) '43Ed , Hais let, M. Tedd emphasized the fact the Universiry Medi al chool is outstanding for the nation. E v~ n s '22 LLB , Dr . Morri ll , Walter B e ni~m i n ' 18BS ;' 20MB ;' 21 MD , t o ~ s tm~ s t e r , MA Y-JUNE, 1950 255 High School Students Told Faculty Appointments: Richard C. Jordan '31AeroE;'33M ;'40PhD, About ~U' at 2 Meetings professor of mechanical engineering, was named by the Board of Regents O PPORTUNITIES and require- April 14 to be acting head of rhe De partment of Mechanical Engineering, ments in attending the Univer Pipestone Organizes; effective Sept. 16. He will succeed sity of MinnesOta were described to Benjamin Is President high school junior and senior srudents Prof. Frank B. Rowley 1911-12, who in counseling meetings at Redwood The Minnesota Alumni Club of is retiring this year. Falls and Mountain lake, Minn., May PipestOne, Minn., organized perman The regents appointed Kenneth 2 and 3, respectively. ently March 29, adopting a constiru Davis, visiting professor in the Har tion and electing officers and directOrs. The assemblies were attended by vard law school, as a professor of law, faculty members, parents and inter The officers elected are Tf/ alter C. effective in eptember, and Dr. leo ested alumni, as well as the students. Benjamin ' 18B ;'20MB;'21MD, presi H. Waibel, expert geographic con Dr. Ralph F. Berdie '38BA;'39MA; dent; Frank Walker '49IT, vice presi sultant to rhe government of Brazil, "42PhD, directOr of the University's dent; and Mrs. Donald Btmdlie, secre as visiting professor of geography for Student Counseling Bureau and pro tary-treasurer. the 1950-51 academic year. fessor of psychology, talked to the Elected to the board of directOrs various groups and answered ques were: for one year-Frederick Yseth tions. '28DD , C. C. Chase '30BS, JlIStin D raper Resigns: Lynn H . Draper The Redwood Falls activity included Swenson '45MechE· two years- Dr. 1946-49Gr, directOr of the rudent an afternoon meeting with the sru ]. F. UV hite, Frank TV alker, Mrs. Housing Bureau since 19 and a Bundlie; three years-Dr, Benjamin, dents and an evening assembly for member of the bureau staff since 1946, M, Tedd Evam '22llB, Mrs, Donald resigned the POSt, effecrive April l. parents and srudents interested in en C. Carman (Jean Boyd) '20BS. Miss Mabelle McCullough, a sistant rolling at the University, and the directOr, was named acting direcror. teachers. At Mountain lake, there were Buffalo Club Elects Richard Drake Head separate afternoon meetings for the On Erosion Board: Dr. Loren G. students and faculty, a dinner meeting The MinnesOta Alumni Club of traub, direcror of the U niversiry's for the parenes and students, with the Buffalo ( . Y.), has re-elected as its t. Anthony Fall Hydraulic labora alumni club officers as hosts, and an president Richard M. Drake '28B ; tOry, has accepted appointmenr a a '33MA'38PhD assistant dean of rhe evening session for consultation with civilian member of rhe beach era i n College of Arts and ciences at The individual students and their parents. board of the U. . Corps of Engineers. University of Buffalo. George Aliddle The Redwood Falls and Mountain brook '39ChemE;· 1M , was named lake clubs arranged with the MAA vice president, and Clarence James office and the University Office of the '41AeroE, secretary-treasurer. The dub On Engineering Commjrree: Dr. Dean of cudents for the meetings a is planning a picnic for June 17 for Ralph L. DOll'dell 'I Met; '21M ; '26- a community educational service. Dr. which Malcolm Eiken '36Ed;·47- PhD. head of the metallurgy depart Berdie was introduced at the meet MEd, is chairman. menr in dle In tit ute of Technology. ings by Vince Reis, MAA field repre has been appoimed ro the a cre:iiting sentative. PHILADELPH IA A EMBL Y committee for merallurgical engineer ing of the Engineers' ounci! for Pro The Minneapolis Alumni Club of fe ional Development. BILLINGS MEETING Philadelphia will have an informal Ed. Logm7 1921-25, and Andy R{//m cocktail gathering May 20, 3 to 5 p,m .. in the Coach Room of the Hotel ar '30BusA, made the arrangement for Writer for Europ an Rep n: P. a meeting of MinnesOta ,lumni in wick for alumni of the metrop litan area. E. Miller, Uni er ity Agri ultura! Ex Billings, Mont., at which the peaker tension er ice director, wa named were George vendse17 '36Ed;' 2MEd, in mid-April as rhe United tate Minne Ota football line c ach, and In World Health Group: Dr. Gayl rd . Ander on, director of the repre entative ro help wrire th re Chet Roan, as istant to the MinnesOta University chool of Publi Health, POrt f r the Eur pean E onomi 0- director of athletics. The Billings ha been named to the rid Health operation Nfi i n. He ha been in group displayed keen interest in re Organizati n' E pert ommittee on Europe e era! m nrh a a member POrt of athletic achievement and Profe si nal Te hnical Education of the thr e-man ommittee ur eying pro pects at the Univer ity. Medical and Auxiliary Per anne!. ' Marshall Plan oumrie . 256 MINNESOTA Who's This? REMEMBER WHEN? December, 1918-Minnesota alumni in New York, having given tIP their l·egztlar alumni club meetings becallse of tbe press of war work, announced plans to meet infol'mally at lunch each UV ednesday noon, be ginning Jan. 8, at Stewart's, 30 Park Place, rrjust behind the Vv' oolworth Builcling." May, 1929-Running through the MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEK LY bound volume for 1929, the MINNESOTA editOr noticed an item about the Thirteenth Annual EditOrs' Short Course conducted on the St. Paul campus. Leader of a panel discussion on current journalistic pr blems was Sam S. Haislet. Now retired from the newspaper and printing business, Sam Haislet is the father of Edwin L. H aislet, Uni versity Director of Alumni Relations. Ed was a wide-eyed undergradu ate in 1929, just hoping that some day he would be an alumnus, period. April, 1939-Wrestler D ale H anson won the national collegiate title in the 128-pound division. The Gopher wrestling team finished third in the national meet . .. The MINNESOTA ALUMNI WEEKLY reported that "Training of naval reserve officers on a scale comparable to that long carried on by the United States Army will be begun at tbe University of Minnesora next fall .. . Fifty men a year will be accepted in the Naval Reserve Officers' Training Corps each year for four years, bringing the total number in training to an eventual 200." (War time found the campus swarming with trainees.) October, 1942-The Minnesota chapter of Triangle, professional engineering fl'aternity, celebrated its twe'ntieth al7nivel'sary with a mort gage burning ceremony and initiation banq1tet at the King Cole Hotel. Remember this campus figure ? (The King Cole Hotel now is a Salvation Army headquarters.) If you were on the Minneapolis May, 1943-MINNESOTA ALUMNUS, successor to MINNESOTA campus in the 1920's or early '30's, you ALUMNI WEEKLY, carried a full page of nOtices of University alumni knew him as Stiffy and repaired to ki lled in the war and more than a page of items of men and women his Stiffy's Gopher for nourishment reporred wounded missing in action, or interned by the enemy. or refreshment ( non-intoxicating) . His real name is William Stedman, his Gopher was at 315 Fourteenth Gradua te Program '36 Engineers Start on Ave. S.E., opposite the University (Continued from page 249) Reunion Plans for 1951 Ave. main gate. Over the past 10 years, an average The electrical engineers' class of Send in your favorite Remember of 330 students have been enrolled 1936 already has begun activity for When picture, with the necessary in each fall quarter in the various gradu a big fifteenth anniversary reunion in formation for possible publication. ate majprs under the College of Edu 1951. Eleven members of the class cation, with more than 600 In discussed initial plans at a recent M innesota Men Leaders residence at the beginning of the cur meeting in Minn(;'apolis, ca ll ed by R. rent year. A tOtal of 155 students For A rmed Forces Day H . Kutscher. Each person present received the master of arts degree With University President James agreed to write two or three other from the Graduate School with majors L. Morrill as Twin ities general class member to develop interest and in education areas during the 1948-49 chairman for the observance of Armed invite uggestion of activities. Forces Day May 20, Arth1lr O. Lamp year. Kutscher returned to Minneapolis land '30BusA, MAA president, is St. Summer programs, particularly plan la t OCt ber to bec me district man Paul chairman for the observance, and ned to offer school workers opportun ager for the Electric Machinery Manu Robert E. Conn, Jr., 1931-35, the ities for advanced study, have become Minneapolis chairman. The Twin facturing Co. With the company since one of the most important parts of Cities will combine activities in a free his graduation, he had been in the show in front of the state fair grand the in-service training program of the Pittsburgh, Pa., office the past 30 stand. ollege of Education. months. MAY-JUNE. 1950 257 Harvard Degrees Go to Archives Is Collecting 23 Minnesota Alumni Harvard Universiry has announced Record of School's Past the awarding of advanced degrees to 23 alumni of the Uoiversiry of Min ''The site 0/ Ihe Ulliversity IS one of nesota. The recipientS, with their Ihe mOSI charming 11l the counlry It Minnesota degrees following their stands amid a grove 0/ foresl trees, upon all elevation 200 feet above the waters names, were: 0/ the ilfiwJJippi, immed,atel}, below Doctor of Philosophy-Robert G, and ill jill! view 0/ the Falls of St. L. W' aite '45MA, Carl A. Batter '42- Anthony." BA, Aksel A. Bothner-By '43IT, and EW, if any, alumni can remember Robert S. Eckley '43MBusA. F the Universiry campus in 1867 Master of cience-Saul Let'inson '47MS. when this description was published Master in Architecrure- eu·ton E. Grif fith '46BArch, and ClaJton M. Page '46- in a catalogue of the Preparatory De BArch. Bachelor of City Planning-George partment, but the scene can still be Kolimky '45BArch. reconstructed through pictures and Master in Business Administration maps (plus a bit of imagination) Mort D. Barron '47Bu.sA, Hosmer A. available in the Universiry Archives. Brou'n '42BA;'48LLB, Burton D. Rein frank, Jr., ' 7BusA, Scott D . Wallon '4- The Archives division, established B , Arthur J. Hayes '47BA. Karl E. Role in 1946 as a unit of the Universiry gard '38BA, and William J. RU:1l1e '45EE. Library, already has colleCted, classi DoctOr of Medicine-Sherman 1 . Hart fied and stored a wealth of historic ma11 . 3AeroE. John L. Juergens '46B , material old and comparatively new. and John M. T yler' 3BA. faster of Pub lic Health-Mary Susich ' DB . Iti s a gold mine for research tudems Mrs. Ru ssell R. Christensen (Marian and also committees seeking informa Bachelor of Laws-James E, Devitt ' 6- A. Huttner) '428S, principal libraria n of BusA, Ernest IF'. LrmJee11 '43BA, and tion and exhibit material for the Uni the University Archives, holds one of Richard C. Van Dusen ' 5B . Master of vefSlry S Cemennial celebration in t he Archives cherished possessions-a Theology-Hou'ard F. Dllnn '26BA. 1951. Marian A. Huttner '42B , who photo of O ld Ma in when it was des on April 15 became the bride of troyed by fire Sept. 24, 1904. RlISsell R. Christemen '46BA is the Archives' principal librarian. Arts and Sciences Election: Her bert Feigl, professor of philosophy, Wide Range Included who is composing the official history has been eleCted to the board of Materials so far received and cata of the Universiry. trustees of the Institute for the Unity logued, including a number of items NOTE: The Archi es lacks space for of cience in the American Academy contributed by alumni, faculry, and storage of loving cups or memorial of ArtS and ciences, Bo tOn. Profes friends of the U niversiry, include shovels from cornerstone laying . Ma sor Feigl will teach cour es in philo many departmemal records and corre terials on paper, fi lm, or records '\ ill sophy at olumbia Uni ersiry's 1950 spondence, material about people asso be welcomed. summer ses ion. ciated with the Universiry through the years Universiry publications, pi cures of the faculry, graduating clas es, and Univer ity evems, phonograph records Lindquist New Head of Dental Clinic Veteran of campus evems, blueprims of campus Law School's Alumni Will Retire June 30th buildings, and even some posters ad verti ing the Gopher of 1898. ll1e Uni ersiry Law Alumni A ci A per onality familiar to man ' ge:ler,1 All this is just a beginning, ac ord ati n ele ted Leonard E. Lilldquist rions of dentJ.1 students at [i nnesora, to '39B &LLB, a presidem at its an the faculty and to clinic patients will be ing to Mrs. Christen en. missing from the campus after next June nual meeting April 13. He i a Min 30. At that time Mi s Tillie Hu se, hup Alumni Can Help neapolis attorney and haiC1Tan f the of eye but mellow of pint, WIll r nee The Archives, he said, is anxious Minne ota state Railroad and '\ are ,Ifrer 35 year as cashier of the hool of hue Commission. Dentistry clini [iss Hu e rakes in her t obtain all uitable materials a"ail tride a daily routine "hleh Includes: a- able--for enlarging the Uni ersiry' Other oSi.cer chosen were Jolm E. Igning patients to student dentists, Issum~ permanent historical record, f r the Peterr '_ BA ;'25LLB, ice presidem; materials, computing fees, recei,ing and emennial elebration, and f r the JoJm K. Dell" rtf' IB L,' :?LLB. sec receipting pal'ment. recelvmg com~llmts (infrequently, he say ), d I u e of Jam es G,.ay '20BA, '\ ide:)' con~actln_ retary, and tallh) V. KlllyOIl '''IBA; J."encie, offi e manJ.gemenr, and -keepin? known Minne ota writer and criric, '33LLB, treasurer, all of MIOne. p lis .he clinic bus me record . 258 MINNESOTA Recreation Head MINNESOT A PROFILES BURRIS, MAN OF TALENTS MAN of diversified talents in peace and war is Donald S. Bltrris '35 BS ; A '41MA. He's been a case worker in social welfare, a clinical psychologist, and now he's village attorney for Edina, a Minneapolis suburb, and has a private law practice, also. He was a member of the Universiry's 1929 Big 10 championship golf team. Burris received his bachelor's and master's degrees in social work and was in that field nine years, as a case worker for Children's Service, St. Paul, secretary of the Baton Rouge, La ., Community Chest, and assistant professor of social work at Louisiana tate Universiry. He was in the psy G. B. Fitzg e rald chological field for four years, as a clinical psychologist in the army in ELPING the people of Minne World War II and at the University H sota and the rest of the nation of Minnesota. He's been in law fot to get more health-giving fun from two years. Burris is the only Minne life is the job of Gerald B. Fitzgerald sota attorney belonging to both the '33MA. Since 1947, he's been the Minnesota tate Bar and Psychological University's director of recreation Associations and also the American D. S. Burris tralOlng, which teaches recreation Association of Social Workers. organization and leadership. Now he has his eye on a fourth field . He's a candidate to be state repre The Universiry's 120 recreation sentative from the south half of the 36th Minnesota district. Burris is a member training graduates since 19 0 are in of the executive committee of the Minnesota Governor's Advisory ounci! on responsible positions with municipal Youth and a director of the Hennepin ounry Community he t and ounci1. and state recreation departments and social and welfare agencies in Minne- ota and elsewhere. Fitzgerald main tains a bigger share are needed in Beauty Plus Brains Minnesota becau e only 30 communi ties in the state have year-around (See CO, ," lor pi"M' 01 Mw Oppesa."d) recreation pr grams. A full-time member of the Uni he's a member of th student per- ANNA OPPE AARD, a seni r in versiry facu lty ince 1946, Fitzgerald J education from rookst n, Minn., nn 1 committee in the ollege of is vice president of the American i one f many girls on the Minneapo Edu ation, was on the educational in Recreation ociery (a profe sional or lis campus who provide attractive termediary board, sang twO year In ganization), chairman of the graduate evidence that beaury and brains do the Univer ity ch IUS , and served in tudy committee of the ollege Re often come in the same package. the freshman orientation program. reation Association, executive secre- A striking brunette, des! ite her he received a certificate at [he Uni tary of the Minnesota vern r Norwegian ancestry, Janna has JUSt ver iry's 19 9 Re ogniti n dinner, and Advisory mmittee on Recreati 11 , c mpleted a one year term as presi this year the Order f rhe North tar, and a member f the overnor' Y uth oun i1. He ha written t 0 dent of the Panhelleni ouncil, co given co 10 oue tanding srudents. ordinating Friends Meeting Is New Group '36 G . A. M. Anderson This is the sixth in a series of articles on the 22 religiottS organizatio1lS George A. M. AllderJOn '36MechE, and Emma Frances Fry in omerset, Pa. They acti've on the University's Twin Cities campuses. will live at 717 . Cedar Sr., Owaronna, Minn. Anderson is a member of Thera Xi. By LUCILLE HARMEL '43 Danforth Graduate Fellow Sidney Shear Sid,ley Shear 1941--13, and Beverly Jean Binstock of r. Paul. They will live at 2140 FRIEND Miss Margaret Barnhart, associate Bayard Ave., r. Paul. direCtor. HE Universicy Friends Meeting '47 T became the newest member CHRlS:rIAN FELLOW HIP Carol Bonhright group of me Srudenc Council of Re Carol Bonbrighl '47BA, ro Orhan Eren ligion when it joined in January. The The Minnesota Christian Fellowship sel Feb. 9 in Ankara, Turkey. They met while srudying at the University of Zurich Friends hold meetings for worship in on the Minneapolis campus holds a weekly chapel hour in the auditorium in Switzerland and will live in Cankaya, the manner of the Sociecy of Friends Turkey. (Quakers ), srudy and discuss the be of me Museum of N arural History. In addition, 11 prayer groups, daily Dr. J. V. Walunga liefs and practices of Friends, and Jack V . If' allinga '45B ;'q6MB;'4'MD , Bible srudy groups, weekly fellowship incerpret these beliefs to others. Meet and CO'H/ance M. Otten '49 . March 18 a[ ings are in the Center for Concinua meetings, socials and week-end re Elk River, Minn. They will live at 61- tion Srudy each Sunday at 10 a.m. treats are sponsored by the organiza Ponland Ave., t. Paul. Howard Lutz is srudenc clerk and tion. This interdenominational group Dr. Z. S. Kremen Miss Gertrude Esteros is f~cu l ty also holds meetings of srudencs inter Zenith . Kremen '4 DD , and Mrs. adviser. ested in the missionary field. Lee Kremen (Merle Anne Epstein ) '49BA are Graber is srudent president and Miss at home at 2827 Irving Ave. ., Minneapolis, Elizabeth Carlson is faculcy adviser. following their marriage Feb. 5 in t. Paul. WESLEY FOUNDAT ION The St. Paul campus MCF sponsors '48 D. M. Erickson Wesley Foundation, which is located similar activities. The srudent presi dent is Myreon etters, and Mr. Elmer D OfUlid M . Erickson '..j ], and Ernestllle in the First Methodist Church at 1209 E. H eld. a srudent at the University, March Fourth t. .E., serves the Methodist Johnson is faculcy adviser. 1 ,at the lutheran rudeD[ Chapel. srudents on the Minneapolis campUl). '48 BAPT I T Under the srudent leadership of fro and fr. G. R. Porrer, Jr. George Zeise, the srudents have week Baptist srudents participate in the Gil) R . Porter, Jr ...... J, and Mrs. Porter ly unday evening program including activities of the Roger Williams Fel (Helen Fole) Anderson) , 6BA, who were supper, seminars, vespers, folk danc lowship at the Univer icy Baptist married last Oerober, live a[ 2911 W. Arthur Ave .. Apr. I, hicago. ing, and Other social events. These hurch located at 1219 Uni ersicy srudents publish a newspaper, Founda Ave. .E. Commuter ' luncheons, '49 tion Fo motes, and sp nsor the Wes weekly Bible classes, monchly partie C. M. el on- 1ary P. al h Ca/t'in l. elSOtl '..j9MechE, and ,Uar) ley Players and Arrow Inn, an eating and socials are on the program. John aunders is rudent president. Patricia Walsh '-j BA farch 17 in [inne co-op, and a fraternicy and a sororicy. apolis. They are ar home at 515 Dela are The Rev. Wilbur Korfhage is minister The Re . John Bone i mini ter to t. .E.. finneapoli . student and Mi s Betcy illi i as of the First Methodi t Church and di Con rance Hoitomt si tant direcror of rudent work. recror of Wesley F undation. John Constance HOI/omt ' 9BA, [0 Gerald \\'. Huebner i a sociate direcror. Ireland, Univer ity medical rudent [arch DI CIPLE O F CHRI T 17 in Minneapoli . They will live In fin The t. Paul campu Wesley neapolis. Foundation highlights its program Dis iple of hri t srudent meet in the Di ciple tudent Fellowship for J. D . Christensen with annual affairs like the Oriental Joseph D. hrisl men . i9 Ed, and La Dinner, Meal in the Upper R om, the Tuesday evening supper and di cus onne Harriet Brown of PequOt Lakes, M, y Morning Breakfa t, and the Gali sion at ni er icy Baptist hurch. March 1 in [inneapoli. Internati nal understanding ha been lean er i e. unday activities are Mr. and fr . P. V. Malmberg empha ized by guest speaker and di - Palll V . ,'Ialmb rg '49BA, of Havre, held at the t. Anch ny Park Metho u ion gr ups. ial are held in the [ont., and Belly Lou Harrtson 1949 of di t hur h, and there are sec ice and h me of the member each quarter. Hibbi.ng, .Minn., Jan. 14 tn Hibbing. They social activiti . Warren Armstrong Mary ils n is tudent pre ident wdl Il\ e tn Havre where the groom is em ployed at the ,ozen' Bank. He j a mem is tudenc pre ident, the Re . ilbur and a sistant ditector. The Re . '\ al ber of Alpha Tau mega and the bride, of D. ro e, mi nister and dire ror, and I. e P mplun i mini ter t rudents. Alpha Tau Delta. 260 MINNESOTA WENTY students have recently T been appointed by their respec tive colleges and three were elected during the April campus elections to positions on the All-University Con gress, student governing board. The students, who will serve for the 1950- 51 school year are: Jim Morris Undergraduate Secretary MlOneapoio,-John Goldner, Allan Kaufmann Rich Lillehei, Jim Riley, Jim Nielson, Clare Leon· .rd, Jerry Peterson, Bill Gross. Sr. Paul- Joho Webster. Jim Marvin. Jim McNary, George Mor· rison. Jay Riozel, Milwaukee, Wis.; Jerry Shull"n, Minot, N D .; Kerieo Fitzpatrick, DaytOn, Ohio; Outstanding Students to Get Willie Harper, Tuskegee, Ala., Mary Lowe, Mone· e1air, N . J ., Eileen Seabloom. Ellie Ruud. Crook· SCO O t Mino I 000 Dlerz, PiDe Island, Minn ; Ruth Ann \Veesoer, Graceville, ~1IDD ,; Roger ~lorri so o Awards for Campus Activity Hutchinson, Minn.; J im Bye, Anoka, M no. HE All-University Congres and T the University administration has reported the selection of 136 students who will receive the annual service Political Groups award for their outstanding contri Choose Officers butions to student life at the Univer sity. The awards will be made at the 'N APRIL 14 4,000 University Congress Recognition dinner in Coff G students went to the polls to man Union May 16 with the presenta elect their college officers and student tions by E. G. Williamson, dean of government. Seventy-seven students students. representing four political parties were The students who wi ll receive the running for the 50 soon to be vacant recognition were recommended by the campus positions. Those elected will deans of the various colleges, depart serve for the next school year. ment heads, and by nomination of the The Gopher Progressive Party. many campus organizations. The high composed mainly of fraternity and Leon C a rr, arts jun ior from Milba nk, est award, the Order of the North s rority members, ran 33 and elected S. D" has been selected as next year's Star, will go to 10 students, and the 21' the All Residence Party, com· e d itor of t he Min nesota Da ily. C arr is Order of the Gopher, next in rank, to po~ed of dormitory and rooming 25 years old a nd is completing his sec 26. The remaining 100 people will house students, ran 15 and elected 12 ; o nd year as a journa lis m major at the be given certificates of recognition. the All Campus Party, drawn from the Un iversity. He was selected by t he Stu The selection committee was com general student body and receiving no d e nt Board of Publications, on April 13 . posed of Dean Henry Schmitz, Col direct backing, ran 10 and elected lege of Agriculture; Roger Page, as three; the Tech Party, professional sistant dean of SLA; Elmer Johnson, srudents, e.g. Engineers ran nine and assistant dean of the Institute of University Win'S a First elected seven. Eight independent can Ted1nology; and Jo Gendreau, asso didates of 11 running were elected. In Big 10 Debate T ourney ciate director of the Student Activi ties Bureau. The University debate team re The winners of the various awards ceived a first place in the annual Big will be announced at the banquet. Freshman Wins $5,000 10 debate tournament which was held Scholarship in Art at the University of Wisconsin. The hades Leng torff, freshman from team won 11 debates and lost 5 with CHAPLAIN VI ITOR Bigfork, Minn., has received a 5,000 Ronald Mankoff and Dwight Lind The Rev. edward H, Peters '1929-3 1Gr. scholarship to the New York Art holm emerging undefeated. The topic chaplain to atholi students at [h e Uni· ch 01 for a pastel painting, the versity from 1929 to 1934, wa a ca mpus debated was "Resolved : That Basic "Yellow Hen." The painting was visitor late in April. He is now pastor of Non-agricultural InduStries Be Na the Church of St. usa nna in Rome, the selected by the New York Scho 1 at tionalized." church for Americans in the Italian capital. a recent exhibit in the east. MAY-JUNE, 1950 261 Fall Registration Begins in August By R. E, SUMMERS, DEA Admissions and Records Although the classes of the fall quarter of 1950 begin on Monday, Oct. 2, registration for that quarter in most colleges will begin on Monday, August 7, 1950. High school seniors planning fall entrance to a college of the University are urged to make ap plication for admission as soon after high school graduation as possible. Students entering from other colleges should apply as soon as they can sub mit complete and official transcripts of their previous college work. The ad mission of non-resident srudents is Jim Marvin has been voted the presi generally restricted. Horace E. Read , law professor at the dent of the All-University Congress for High school graduates may secure University since 1934 will become in 1950-5/. Marvin is a junior in University June the dean of the Da lhousie Univer College and a native of St. Paul. He has application blanks from their high sity School of Law at H alifax, Nova been a member of the Congress for the school principal or from the Office of Scotia, He will be returning to the past year. Admissions and Records of the Uni school which awarded him his first law versity. StudentS with a year or more degree in 1924 and in which he taught of college work should apply for ad nine years. mission with advanced standing and they may secure application forms by writing to the Office of Admissions and Records. For most new students a two-day orientation and registration ST. PAUL CAMPUS period is arranged for small groups of Mrs. W. J. Klein Heads students in the late summer to help Minnesota Alumnae Club wedish Students Arrive: Eight them become better acquainted with Swedish agricultural exchange Stu the University and to facilitate their The Uni ersicy of Minnesota Alum dents arrived at the University April registration, Instructions for securing nae Gub, at its annual meeting April 15 for a year's farm experience and appointments for this program will be 22, elected M rs. If/illiam J, Klein schooling. After six months' work on mailed to all new students with their (Myrtle Town end Jamison ) '27 DH, Minnesota farms they will enter the certificates of admission. as pre ident. Al 0 named for [wo year University School of Agriculrure Oct. terms were Juliana Iillfell 1925-41 , 1 for six months' academic training. econd vice president; CarOl)'ll Atlder Five Minnesota youths left March 20 son '39Bu A, corre ponding ecretary: and three previously for training in 2, 63 from the pring quarter a year R ose K Ofasek '26HE , trea urer; and Sweden under a cooperative agree ago. The Duluth campus enrollment a directors, Irs. H enry E. K uehn ment between the t. Paul campus at the start of the quarter was 1 65' , (Alma G. B ebme ) '19BA, M rs. Ray chool of Agriculture, the American with 20,005 on the Twin itte mond chroeder ( Helma Mal ren ) wedish Institute in Minneapoli , and campu e . '05BA , and Mary A n1l Fifzp,lfrick '3 - the Royal Labor Board in weden. Ed. rhe retiring pre ident. The club will ha e a luncheon meeting June 17 at 1 p.m. in the D L TH CAMP omen ity lub 10 t. Paul, and MINNEAPOLIS CAMPU Five Univer ity of Mione ota Du an all-day outing July 15 at tillwat r, Attendance Drop: Attendance at luth Brancll student have been Minn. the University (Minneapoli, t. Paul, accepted for the fall term of the Two sholar hip for iris for next and Duluth campuses) tOtaled 21,65 Univer ity' Medical chool. The ru year at the ni er ICY will b awarded students at the start of the pring dent elected are: Eunice nder on, b the club. one to a Minneapoli hi h quarter. This is a drop of 1,887 from Lu ille aloum, Dorette heat, Roger eho I graduate and the other to a the winter quarter and a decline of Haglund, and Joh els n. t. Paul graduate. 262 MINNESOTA Mervin Jensen Is Named Mat Captain Mervin Jensen was eleCted captain of the 1951 Minnesota wrestl ing team University Ties during the spring vacation, by his teammates. Jensen, a physical educa tion major, succeeds Captain Alan Rice \Vith Ohio State who graduates this year. Jensen, who M INNESOTA SURPRISED has been one of the most promising EVERYONE by winning the wrestlers in the mid-west conference, first game of a twO game series from was handicapped by injuries for the Ohio State 5-2 to mark the opening most of this season. He hails from of the Big 10 baseball conference Albert Lea, Minn., where he formerly schedule. It was a first rate grudge held the state high school champion battle as Buckeye Carl Parrill was out ship. to even a bad blow that Minnesota gave him last year. Parrill was set for The Gophers came from behind in the Conference batting championship the second game to win 10-9. Other last year until held hitless in eight games that were lost on the trip were times at bat. This alone tumbled him two each at Baylor and Oklahoma from the lead to sixth place in batting Universities. averages. In the second game, OSU Coach Dick Siebert's starting lineup rallied to Out hit the Gophers 15-6. against Ohio had Gostic, catching; The Minnesota record to date has Bill Kranz, Jim Anderson, Bob Grau Da ve Skrien, jun ior from Morris, Min not been very good as the Gophers mann, land Holker in the infield; nesota , has been e lected ca ptain of t he won only one match during their Warner, Duane Baglien, and Dick 1950 G o phe r foot ba ll tea m. Dave was spring training trip. This was against Myklebust, outfield; Lloyd Lundeen, a regula r starte r at t he fullback spot for pitcher. C oach Bie rm a n last yea r. H e is an edu Texas A & M on March 25 after the cat ion major and is 2 1 years o ld. Aggies had taken the first game 13-9. Spring Sports Schedule MAY 12- 13-BASEBALL, NOTRE DAME, HOME, 8 p.m. Fri., 2:30 Sat. MAY l3-TRACK, WI CON IN, HOME, 1 p.m. May 13 -Tennis, Iowa at Iowa Cicy. May 13-Golf, Notre Dame at Notre Dame, Ind. May 15 - Baseball, Augsburg at Nicollet Park, S p.m. MAY 15 - GOLF, NORTHWESTERN, HOME. May 15 - Tennis, Iowa State at Ames. May 16- Baseball, CarletOn at Northfield, 2 p.m. May 16- Golf, arleton at Northfield. May IS-Golf, Wisconsin at Madison. May 19-2 0-Baseball, Iowa at Iowa City. May 20- Track, Iowa at Iowa icy . MAY 26-27-BASEBALL, WI CONSIN, H ME, S p.m. Fri., 2:30 Sat. May 26-27-Track, onference Meet at EvanstOn. May 26-27-Golf, Conference Meet at Ohio State. MAY 27-TENNIS, NORTHWESTERN, HOME. Ll oyd Lund een, vet era n lette rm a n, May 29-30-3 I- Tennis, onIerence Meet at EvanstOn . pitched the ope ning g a me of Minn e June 10- Track, entral Intercoll. Meet at Milwaukee. sota's confe re nce baseba ll schedule JUNE 16-17-TRACK, NCAA MEET AT U. of MINN. whic h the G o ph e rs won 5-2, from Ohio June 20- Track, Big 10 Pacific oast Meet at Madison. Stat e. Lund een is a graduate of W est High in Minnea polis and is a jun ior in t he colleg e of education. 1950 HOMECOMING - MINNESOTA VS. IOWA - NOV. 4 MAY-JUNE, 1950 263 Regents Approve THIS IS YOUR INVITATION TO ATTEND THE McConnick Plan HE BOARD OF REGENTS has McCORMICK TESTIMONIAL T passed the McCormick plan which calls for a 1 increase in srudent DINNER incidental fees. Under the plan golf, tennis and skating will be free to all JUNE 14 - COFFMAN MEMORIAL UNION students. The additional fee will be added to the incidental part of the BALLROOM - 6:30 P.M. quarter registration fee which at the This is the time of the NCAA Track Meet and all the athletic notables in the present time is approximately 12 per intercollegiate world will be wirh us to pay tribute to Frank. omething real quarter. This fee covers health serv good is being planned. I know you want to share in this occasion. Ice, Minnesota Daily subscriptions Send in your reservation now - Tickets 5.00 each. counseling service, union dues, etc. Edwin L. Haislet, Chairman Under the present set-up golf COStS the student 60 cents for 18 holes, McCORMICK TESTIMONIAL COMMITTEE tennis 25 cents an hour, and skating 35 cents during the day and 50 cents (Clip and Mail) in the evening. The added revenue RESERVATION CO PO will bring the Athletic department To McCormJck Testimonial Commlnee between 75 ,000 and 80,000 yearly. 205 Coffman Memorial Union The issue brought varied response University of NLinnesoca from srudent organizations. The All Minneapolis 1 , Minn. Please count rue in on the Frank G. McCormick Testimonial Dinner, June 14 , Universiry ongress passed the plan at 6 :30 p.m., Coffman Memorial Union Ballroom. unanimously, whereas the Tech Com I enclose for tickets at 5.00 per ticket. mission, professional school govern Because the name of each guest will be primed in the program, the names of ing board, voiced direct opposition on tbose who will use the above tickets are: the grounds that the facilities are al ready overcrowded and that it was un ( Please print) fair to force all the students to pay for the pleasure of a few. incere!y yours, The plan will be placed in opera amce ______tion at the beginning of the fall Addres,,-s ______quarter. 61 Letters Given In Halsey Hall to Emcee McCormick Dinner Five W inter Sports Halsey L. (Hol)1 CO il') Hall 1915- Only 800 ticket will be i ued for 26, Minneapoli Tribune pons writer The Universiry enate ommittee the dinner, ac ording to Ed HaiJle/ and W 0 newscaster, will be toast '~ lEd , arrangement commirree chair on Intercollegiate Athletics ha ap rna ter at the testimonial dinner June proved the granting of 61 letter in 14 for Frank M ormick, who retires man. The commirree i being a sisted five winter sports as recommended by then a Uni ersiry athletic director. by a Twin irie ad, i ory group. athletic director Frank Mc ormick. The dinner I pan ored by the Of the 61 students receiving a let Universiry, "M" lub, Athletic De- TO HONOR DO R ter, 38 are newcomers to the Gopher partment, and Minne ota Alumni Former medIcal fellow and a sociare of "M" dub. The letter seem to be A ciation. H enry E. Muhelso71 ' IOB .' 12MD, direc evenly distribuced geographically a Those who have already a cepted cor of the University fedi I chool's deem there are 30 winner from the Twin 10 Itatlon to peak include Harry aeolog)' division the pa e 15 years, were to rullJdreher of the ni er iry of i- Cities area and 29 from el ewhere in honor him wich a te amonia! dinner Ma ' consin, representing athletic directors 5 in rhe NLinnC"apoli lub. Fort)' per "on MinnesOta, with five from out of the in the Big 10; Kenneth (Tug) il- were expected co attend. The omminee an state of Minne ota. Two of the 61 are on, Big 10 athletic comroi i ner, charge includes arl 11" W ) n1011 '2 B ;" 0- managers. The number of letter per representing the National ollegiate fB ; l ID;'33M ;'3 PhD, Fral1CII L) lIch port were: ba ketball, 12; boxing, 9; Athletic A ociati n; and Arch ard '2 B ,'2 9~fB ;') 0~ID , ' 3 f , Jo/m Madd " hockey, 15; swimming, 13; wre ding, of the hi ago Tribune, for the port '2 IB ;'25MB;'16 fD, and Elmer Rill/e ll 12. writers. '2 IB,'19 10. 264 MINNESOTA erating throughout me United tates is Malcolm A. Sedgwick, 1914·17. He is vice presideor of me Home Insurance Co. of ew York Ciry. Res.: ew Canaan, Conn. '26 MrJ. R . Rdm'dY Pdrker, 1401 June Ave., Tyrol Hills, MInneapolis, corresponden,. Jo ephine L Opsahl A quizz collection of questions and clues coorributed by Josephil1e M. Opsahl '26- BusA, and dealing wim America's neigh bor counrries to me norch and south was publisbed in me January The Instructor magazi ne. 1iss Opsahl is secretary to staH assistaor George Ludeke '40BA at General mills, Inc. '27 James Gray '20BA, this spring is Do",,/4 C. Roger" 2408 Climon Ave .. Min· neapolis, correspondent. completing his one·year tenure as na tional presi dent of Delta Ph i Lambda, Eugene ueber honorary writing sorority. Gray is writ A Minnesota alumnus of prominence Eugene Surber '27Ed;'29MS, has been ing the officia l his tory of the University, in the Greek leHer world is Mrs. How named chief biologist for me U. S. Public to be published in connection with the ard C . Flemmer (Mary Jane Grimes) Healm ervice for me area of Minnesota, University centennial observance in '30BA, of Chatham, N. J ., who is near Wisconsin, Michigan, me Great Lakes, and 1951 . ing completion of the first year of her pans of Indiana, Iowa, Illinois, and me Red two-year term as grand president of River Valley. He will be stationed in A lpha Gamma Delta Sorority. She was Chicago. president of the Minnesota chapter in 1929-30. J. B. fader, Jr. Joseph B. Mader, Jr. '27BA;37MA, has '30 been promoted to assistaor director of me Departmeor of Information of me Ameri Marchene Chute '81 can Perroleum Institute. Mader has been A book rich in fact and interesting nar· Fred B. Sn)der, 1430 Rand Tower. Minne district representative for me Oil Indusuy apolis, correspondent. Information Committee in me middle At rative, .. hakespeare of London," by Mar lantic district. He once taught in me Uni chette Chute '30BA, is one of me April dual fred B. nyder versiry journalism department and warked selections of me Book-ol·me· 10nm Club. To Fred B. StJyder' 1, chairman of me on several northwest newspapers. Long a suburban resident of Minneapolis. Universiry Board of Regents, on April 17 Miss Chute now lives wim her two writing weor me newly established Citizen of me '28 sisters in ew York Ci ty. Monm award of me Minneapolis Council of Ray P. Archer, 2120 es' Lake of tbe Isles Civic Clubs. Previous winners were Mrs. Blvd., MlDneapobs, correspondenL R. W. andelin lIfabeth Hurd Paige '99LLB. former state Living way down soum in Birmingham legislator, and Edu'ard F. Waite 1915-16, Fei-man Wang is Robert Ir'. Samielin '30ChemE;'31M ; retired jurist of me Hennepin Couory From Mrs. Edward R. Johnson (Lydia E. '41PhD. He is chief metallurgist for the (11inn.) juvenile court. Powell) '28 fdT, has come word mat her tockham Valves and finings Co., in charge friend and classmate, Fei·man nv ang, '28- of chemical, physical, sand testing, and '10 HEc, and husband, Dr. L. C. Tzu, have reo metallurgical laboratories. Res.: 2854 Fair turned from China to t. Paul, residing at way Drive, Apr. 223A, Birmingham 9. Mr,. P. V. Dool'Y, 4037 Linden Hills Blvd., 2154 Knapp St. While in China. Fei·man MIDoeapolis. cocrespoodent. was director of and raught in government O. M . Holen home economics departments in TientSin O. lIf. Holen '10LLB, owns me Holen and Lanchow, Kansu. Edward R. Johtlsotl '31 graduared from me University in 1924 in Adjustment Bureau in Chicago, located at H.rold Hohhn, Holden Pnotlog Co .• 430 327 . La aile. agriculture. The Johnsons have tbree chil u,h S,xrn S' . Minneapolis, correspondent. dren. Dr. Phillip Kelly ' 17 H. . Pratt Dr. Phillip Kelly '31Ag. formerly chle! Albe" P. B~Jlon. 2108 Kenwood Pkwy., Elected president of the Chicago branch ~{ i nDeapolis. correspoodeot. of dairying at outh Dakota tate olle e. of the American Pharmaceutical Associa· M. A. edgwick tion was Harold \19. Pratt '28Phm, head of now is chief of the College of Agriculture One of me several Minnesota alumni the Walgreen drug stores' professional servo dairy division at the Univer lry of e who are officers of in urance companies op- ice departmenr. braska. J~FMida~ gfmore -dMt tie ~fom 00 on HE MAN and his grandson carne into borrowed on hi endowment policr to T the clearing. "This is Lookout Poi nt," help get his gasoline station tarted. the man said. "I like to sit here and look He could have, but he remembered down there at our town." that boys like to hike more than they " I t' a well place," the boy said. like to Ii ten. . They sat on a flat stone ledge, many The youngster wa looking intently at year weathered. Below them the to, n hi grandfather. "You ure like that town, . pread out in it irregularity like the hub don't you?" and broken pokes of an old wheel. ''1.' e , I do. I've been part of it for a they a te their lunch, the man poin ted good many years." He took a last glance out orne of the landmarks. " You can o er the countf) ide. " ;\laybe an impor ee the Rogers factory over there to the taor part of it." He cleared hi throat. ea t. ee it?" "Come on, on, we'd better get started The boy nodded and his grandfather for home_" continued. "That' been verr important They left Lookout Point behind them to our to n and, you might ar , I'm sort and headed down the winding trail. of respon i ble for the factory being there." "H ow' that?" NEW YORK LIF E I URANCE COMPANY 51 MaWson Aveoue. 1 ew Yo F. F. Wangaard Author of a new book, Mechanical Prop erties of Wood, is Frederick F. 117 angaard '33BS. Formerly technologist for the Forest Products Laboratory in Madison, Wis., Dr. Wangaard now is associate professor of forest products at Yale University. A '35 John J. M cGlone, 816 Second Ave. S , Min Service neapolis, correspondent. R. C. Zinn Aircraft service superintendent at Pan of American World Airways overhaul base in Miami, Fla., is Rahland C. Zinn '35AeroE. It is the largest maintenance base of its Your type in the world. During World War II, Zi nn set up air bases and maintenance sys tems for military planes in Brazil for both University the American and Brazilian governments. C. H. Hoffman Clarence H. Hoffma/1 '35PhD, has joined the research staff of the Bureau Enromol The G. A. Rich~rdson ogy and Plant Quarantine in Washington, D. C. He will be an aide to Dr. F. C. C01'respondence Study To George A . Richardson '25M ;'27PhD, Bishop, assistant chief in charge of research the American Chemical Society has given work for che bureau, in planning, devel Dept. is a part of the its 1,000 Borden Award in hemistry. oping, and directing research activities concerning insects and their control. He Dr. Richardson, 56, professor of dairy hus· has been doing forest insect work for the General Extension bandry and dairy chemistry at Oregon bureau in the field since 1935. rate ollege, was ci ted for research on the Division which extends H . F. Scobie physico-chemical properties of milk, in· Herbert F. Scobie '35 hem;'44MS, of tbe 1'eSOti/rces of the c1uding his studies on the prevention of Evansron, Ill., who formerly taught souring. The prize was to be presented fou nd ry and chemistry courses at dle U ni University to YOU, the April lO at the society's national meeting versiry, became executive secretary of Triangle, national engineering fraternity, in Philadelphia. ALUMNI. Feb. 1. He also is ediror of che Triangle Review and American Foundryman maga '32 zines. Scobie is a member of igma Xi, national honorary scientific fraternity, and RIChard iIlor.",., 2731 Pillsbury Ave .. Min· ... For those unable to Phi igma Phi, U. of Minn. band fratern neapolis. correspondent ity. Mrs. cobie is the former Rllth Taylor attend classes, courses K. . Johnson '44Ed. Res.: 1404 entral, Evanston. Kem,elh C. Johnson '32 hemE;'37PhD, Dr. M. T. Mitchell are offered by mail. has been named section manager in the Practici ng as an obstetrician and gyne Dyestuffs Division of the DuPont Co. Or cologist in Minneapolis is Mancel T . Nearly 300 credit and ganic Chemicals Department. He formerly MilChell '32B ;'34BM;'35MD. He is mar was assistant technical manager. Johnson ried and has three sons, Talcott, John, and non - credit courses are David. also has a new address, 107 Rowland Park described in Bulletin 1. Blvd., arrcrofr, Wilmington, Del. G. A. Speedy Gerald A. Speedy, who majored in soci H . B. Brunet al work at the University in the early Living at II 56 opeland t., Lynwood, 1930's, is now national director of cub CORRESPONDENCE Calif., H ellri B. Brunet '32Arch, is an scouting for the Boy coutS of America. architect asso iate for the ity of Los Assistanr director of the activity since 1940, STUDY Angeles. he was elevated to the directorship follow ing the deach of the incumbent director '33 last fall. Department Herman ROJ8"blnll, 510j Luverne Ave., ~{Inoeapolis. correspondent '36 MrJ. Wright Broolu, 5056 Garfield Ave. S. Helen He tad t..f i nneapoJ is, corcespoodeot. University of Millnesota Helen Hesrad '33Ed, nursing consultant 01. J. B. Baker Minneapolis 14 in maternal and child health for the Minne Colonel James B. Baker '36AeroE, is en apolis Healch Depanmeoc and ommunity rolled in the Air University'S enior Offic Health service, has left to become direcror ers Military Management Course at the of visiting nurses in Dubuque, Iowa. U. . Air Force pecial Staff S hool, Craig MAY-JUNE,1950 267 CLASSICS HEAD son is the former Margaret Pe/ersor1 '39B' . They are among the MAA's new memben. The Universicy of Cincinnati has ap pointed Dr. Carl W. Blege'J, Minnesora Mrs. O. R. R onning '07BA, co be head of its Depanmenr of Mrs. Odd Kmlt R onning ( Margaret Classics. Dr. Blegen, who is a brorher of Lynch ) '37BA, writes, owns and stars on Dean Theodore C. Blegen of rhe Univer rhe American Broadcasting Company show, sicy of Minnesota Graduare School, has "Erhel and Albert," carried bl' WTCN been on rhe Cincinnati faculcy 23 years. Monday nights in :Minneapolis. Her hus Recog nized as a world aurhoricy on ancient band is a graduate of rhe Norwegian Insti Troy he has conducted many imponant rute of Technology in Trondheim, Norway, u cheological projecrs in Greece and Asia and has srudied foresrry ar yracuse Univer Minor. sicy, N. Y. Res.: 12 Gramercy Park, New York 3, N . Y. Air Force Base, Ala. Upon complerion of J. H. Harrison the course he will rerum ro Mirchell Air J. H. Harriso1l, '37MinE, superintend Force Base, New York, where he is as ent of the Oliver Iron Mining Co.'s Moun SIg ned to ducy as commanding officer of rain Iron mine has been transferred to a the 2102nd Air Wearher Group. similar posr ar rhe company's Coleraine, Minn., operarion. Harrison has been with '36 Oliver Iron since 1937. Dr. H. R. Jensen Dr. Herbert R . Je'Hen '36BusA, has been '38 appointed acting director of rhe Division of Audio-Visual Insrructional Services of rhe lIfrI. Peler R. EdmondI, 50}4 Abbott Ave. D. R. Wagner Narional Education Associarion. He also S.. M inneapolis, correspondeor. will serve as executive secretary of the NEA Jack Werner The Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. has Depanment of Audio-Visual Instruction. promoted DOflald R . IF' agller '48BusA, to Among the many Minnesora law gradu Dr. Jensen was on the staff of rhe University be supervisor of irs Pol-mer-il linseed oil Visual Education ervice in the 1930·s. ares connecled wirh the various federal sales in melropolilan ew York, ew Jer· agencies is Jack IF"er'ler '36BA;·38LLB. He G. H . Wise sel', and ew England. is assisrant chief of rhe Common Carrier Recently announced as rhe winner of rhe Divisions, Bureau of Law, Federal Com 1949 Borden Award in Dairy Production. municacions Commission. Res.: 901 N . American Dairy cience Association, was Wayne I., Arlington, Va. George H. Wi e '36PhD, who is head of rhe THE~aRING aOl mal nutrition in the Department of AnI R. W. Teyra OF DISTINCTION mal Husbandry at Norrh Carolina State Robert 11'7. Teyro '38-'41, is newly ap College. The award was for his "compre poinled manager of all International Busi hensive srudies upon the physiology of gas NG AWAitED IlASlE ness Machines Corporation in the Sioux lo NOW AVA tric digestion in the calf." Cicy, Iowa, area. Teyro was formerly reM '37 ales representative in c. Paul. Signet Top ,\IrI. Mrlchell Ch.rnI8)l. 2 165 Carroll Ave .• Ce ilia Nelson with Crest SL Paw, ~{ i nn .• correspondent. Cecilia elsotl '38Ed, is principal of Intaglio for Arless Spielman Phalen Park choal in the I. Paul public the RUgged Arless pielman '37Ag was promoted school SYSlem. Res.: 6 Inner Drive. Indiv idual from chief of the Division of Animal In D r. D . C. Johnscon dustries co Associate Director of the Agri David C. Johnston '3 DO , is practic cu lrural Experiment t, tion, Universicy of ing in Red Wing, Minn. Res.: 1514 Easr Connecticut. Ave. 1. 1. Fergu on Arthur Magnu on Ira L. Ferg1lJon '37BA;' 1M , in Febru Arthllr Magt1flssoll '38Ag;' OM , is a ary received a doctor of philosophy degree practicing velerinarian at Blooming Prairie, fro m rhe Deparunent of Educational Re Minn. sea rch , Columbia Universicy, wirh his major in hygiene and health education. He has bee n professor of health education at outh T O Z RICH ern University, Baton Rouge, La . Two Minneapoli phy i ians, John M . R. M. T rueblood Adams . 3PhD, associate professor of Robert M. Trueblood '37BusA, is resi pediatrics al the Uni ersicy, and Leollard dent ma nager at Pittsburgh (or Touche, A. T itmd '35B c'MD;' 6MD;'39M ;' 6- STONE N iven, Bailey and man. Res.: 13 Bread PhD, will present reports at rhe iA,th In CHOICE of ing Ave., Ben Avon, Pittsburgh 2. ternational ongre s of Pediatrics in Zuri h, witzerland, July 2 -28. Dr. Adams G. F. T horkelson will present eviden e tbar the virus which Professional farm management, consult causes nnly a common cold in an adull ing service, and appraisals are the fun tion may cau e virus pneumonia in an infanl. L.G.Balfour CO. of rhe T horkelson Farm Management erv Dr. Titrud will de cribe a newly developed I 3 09 VI F 0 U R T H S T., S . E ice opened last month in R hester, Minn., surgi al operalion foe remo al of a p rtion MIN N E A POL I S, MIN N E SOT A by G. P. Thorkelso1> '37B . Mrs. T horkel- f Ihe brain for the relief of epilep y. ~68 MINNESOTA '39 W . K. Belin M". Arlhur Nattalin, 19 Barton Ave. SE., Wallace K. Belin '41ChemE, has been Minneapolis, correspondent. appointed production superintendent of the Monsanto Chemical Co.'s Trenton, Mich., Dr. E. B. Staats plane. He has been assistant producrion sup President Truman has appointed Elmer ervisor of the plant since 1947, and wi th the B. Staats '39PhD, to be assistant director company since 1941. of the Bureau of the Budget. Dr. Staats has Dr. A.rthur Thompson been executive assistant direaor of the bureau since February, 1949, and a bureau Dr. Arthur Thompson '41Ag, has become executive since 1939. During the war, he a pomologist (scientist of fruit growing) was in charge of the bureau's budet esti at the University Experiment Station at mates work covering the major war agencies. Kearnsville, W . Va. He formerly was with the U. . Department of Agriculture Ex· Dr. W. F. McLimans periment Station at Wenatchee, Wash. lWilliam F. McLimans '39BA;'47PhD, former assistant professor of bacteriology '42 at the University, is now with the U. S. Public Health Service at the Rocky Moun Cal,,;n L. Sm;.h, 2930 Knox Ave. N .. Min tain Laboratory, Hamilton, Mont. neapolis. correspondeQ[. H oward Woodworth '40 Doubling in Blackstone is Howard Woodworth '42Ag. He's on the staff of the Robert McDonald, 3529 Thirry·fifth Ave. S., U. S. Department of Agriculture experi Minneapolis. cocrespondenc. Charles F. Park, Jr., '31 PhD , inte r ment station at Beltsville, Md., and also is na tionally recognized ex pert on ore A. E. Frank aerending night law school at George deposits, has been named dean of t he Washington University. Address : Box 174, Albe-rt E. Fratlk '40MA, a U . S. Foreign Stanford Un ivers ity Sc hool of Mine ra l College Park, Md. Service officer, has been transferred from Sciences. He has been on the Sta nford Sydney, Australia, to Toronto, Canada, as faculty si nce 1946. Dr. H arold Elishewitz vi ce consul. He went to Sydney soon after Harold Elishewitz '42PhD, has been ap· being commissioned in the Foreign Service pointed to the faculty of the Chicago Medi in 1947. cal chool, as assistant professor of parasit Bernice M. Spittler ology. In addition to teaching and F. D . Kaiser lecturing, he will engage in research, in· As a projecr engineer for the Westing Bernice M. Spittler '40Ed, is now living cluding studies of tumors in insects, the house Elecrric Corp. at SOaron, Pa., Francis in Chicago, at 6917 South Crando:l. Her development of malaria, and host· parasite D . Kaiser '40EE, is responsible for the brother Marvin Spittler '32BA, lives at relationships. design of power recrifier transformers, Waseca, Minn. furnace transformers, and core type power Max Shulman transformers. J. W. Evans The "Barefoot Boy with Cheek" author, Max Shulman '42BA, has turned the other Charles Minelli James W . Evans '40PhD, an authority in cheek with a book, "Sleep Till Noon," Charles Minelli '40BS;'4BMEd, is direc- the carbohydrate, food and chemurgic fields released by Doubleday. hulman and his • tor of the Concert Band at Kansas State of research, on April 1 became director of wife, formerly Carol S. Rees '42BA, live on Teachers' College, PittSburg. A program the research laboratories of the American Long Island, N . Y., and have four sons. for a recent concert, received at the Uni Maize-Products Co. at Roby, Ind. Previously versity, shows the band has 76 instrumental he had been a research executive fo'r Gen ists. Minelli was an assistant to Gerald eral Mills at Minneapolis, where he was Prescott, director of the University bands, acrive in the development of the new cake, Alumna Honored for Long in 1939-40 and 1947·4B. pie, and biscuit mixes, among other items. Membership in Sorority He was a research assistant and instructor in agricultural biochemistry at the Univer pry, ninety-one-year old Louise Hollist er '83B received a leerer from the national sity. J. C. Belshe Chosen Man office of Delta Gamma, congratulating her Of the Year at Northfield on 50 years' membership in the sorority, according to word se nt in by Mildred C. In recognition and appreciation of his '41 Bfai r '30ED, Davenport, Iowa. varied community services in Northfield, Eben Pmger, 23 21 Brown Ave., EvanSto n, Miss Hollister, located in Davenport Minn., the Northfield Junior Chamber of III .. correspondeDc Commerce elected Joseph C. Belshe ' 5- since 1915, belongs to t. John's Methodist B &MB;'46MD, as the city's outstanding church but regrets that she "can't be active D r. R. H aserick young man of the year. He received a gold J. .tny more." he approves of young people being active but feels that they hurry tOO key, the presentation being made April 11 John R . Haserick '38B ;'40MB;' IMD; much. by his father, Charles Belshe, who was BM , is a dermatologist with the Cleve elected mayor of Northfield in March. land Clinic. Res.: 1105 Hereford Rd., Following graduation from the univer Dr. Belshe was active in setting up a Cleveland Heights 12, Ohio. SIty, where ' she was va ledictorian and Phi Northfield youth center, organizing a cam Beta Kappa member, Miss Hollister taught paign for a respirator for the Northfield school in D uluth, taking active interest in Hospital, donating free physical examina c. W. Jensen the lo,-al WCTU chapter. She became state tions for Boy ScoutS, and inaugurating Curtis 117'. Jensen 1939- I, of Rapidan, vice-president, then na tional organizer for free city-wide tests for diabetes. Mrs. Bel Minn., this school year has been attending WCTU, lecturing th roughout the United she is the former Jlme M. Larsell '45N. the ollege of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio. States and in Europe. Today's News-Today ! THE AMAZI G PEE D and aura y with which n w ome electrical and me hani al yalu I , us d to ontrol p wer. to u are genuin tribule to the great new-paper. and th e In . u pp l ~ ina the. e materials. and man~ needed hemi- nell' ervi e , to radio and televi ion-and the people "ho al. ' ha a hand in getting the nell, II iftl~ t ~ ou. The taff th m. people o{ ' nion arbide also produce hundr cIs of other It' a , tory f ommunication. Radio na, h word,-b\ basi material. for the u, e of science and llldu-.ln . voice r telet) p - acr ~ continents and _ea \\ ith ligh tn ing FREE : 1/ .'ou Itould lae 10 knolt more alHJul ~ peed. Pi ture m a, fa 1. And t day t I vi, ion and pho· man' of the rhinp.s YOII IISf' Clcn do,. M!nd for Ihed/u51rated boo/del"Product! and P,o('("'( $l':s." tograph. ar u. ed in a meth d to tran mit instantane ush II /el/. IIOIt serenee and ,ndu"n u e (( 's .JIIo, . O ..nllrols. arbon. ,0 •• and 1'IO$I'N . and reprodu fu ll page, of print d, wri tt n, or illu lrated "ri'/c/or free Booklel B. malt r in th original form! Electroni the basi of u h peed. pecial m tal are UNION CARBIDE r quir d for th tube in_ulati n keep ARb CARBON CORPORATION high fr quen urr nt in ri ght ir uits. arbon unique 30 ... ~ T I: 0 ,,1 U ...... T 00 E \V ) I{ J,. 17. • Y. Trade'nlarkf'd PrOl/uc(S oj Dit'isions and (,1/;1 ;1/ lude EL CTRO\lET Alloys and letals H WNES S. EI. LITE lIoys Y THETIC ORC IC CHF.MIC LS BAKELITE, KRENE, and I'IYLrrE PI. tiC ITIO ~L Carbon EVEREADY Flashhght . nd Batte" ~ C HESON Electrodes PRE TONE and TREK nto-Freeze LINDE O. y~en PREST- ,LrrE Acetytene PYROF. X Gas 270 MINNESOTA '42 Laurene Tibbetts 1944·46, of Minneapolis, E. V. Johnson C. E. Johnson received a gold bracelet. She was entered Bsbern V , Johllsol1 1948, is the new agn· by the Minnesota League of Poets. She culrural agent in Winona County, Minn. Formerly a field man for the Holly Sugar also won a gold typewriter as first prize succeeding Norman Mitldrum '42AgEd, Corp. at Hanford, Calif., Clarence B. John· in the Christmas greeting poetry contest who was named assistant Minnesota 4·H JOn '42Ag, on March 1 became a farm ad· sponsored by the Minneapolis Junior Cham club agent. visor for the California Extension Service ber of Commerce. in Madera County. Address : Farm Advisors R . G. Zumberge Office, Post Office Bldg., Madera, Calif. Rosemary Conzemius Robert G, Zumberge '48AssocA, is con tinuing his srudies at the University, work '43 Rosemary C01lZemius '46BA has been ap ing toward a B. A. in economics. pointed as the Minnesota Extension Servo Edwin C. Braman, 1325 W . Twency·seventh ice's club agent in Rice County. V. L. Helgeson St., Apt. 204, Minneapolis. correspondent. Employed by rhe Emerson Electric Manu· Dr. F. J. Dixon Paul T. Aitken facturing Co_ of St. Louis, Mo., as an electrical engineer is Virgil L. Helgeson Promoted last month to be an assistant Palll T. Aitken '46BS;'48LLB, is an at torney, practicing in Detroit Lakes, Minn. , SIT. Res.: 7104 Florian, Normandy 20, professor of pathology in the School of Med· Mo, icine at Washintgon University, St. Louis, Res.: 1029 Lake Ave. Grace E. Robinsoo Mo., was Frank J. Dixon '41BS;'43MB&· MD. '47 Grace B. Robinson '48Ed, is a nursing Stephen HlSe, 972 GoodClCh Ave., SI. Paul, instructor in the chool of Nursing at '44 correspondent. olumbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City. Robert Carlson, Rt. 9, White Bear, Minn., W. M. Brewster correspondeo[. W . N, Hubert William M. Brewster '47 Ag, has resigned Mrs. E. R . Larson Employed as a technical assistant by The from his position with a Port Arthur, Can Institute of Paper Chemistry at Appleton, Mrs. E. R. Larson (Lilia Askdal) '44Ed, ada, Rour milling firm and now is an agrono Wis., is Il7ade N , Hilbert '45B ;'48ChemE. lives at 305 East Third t., Albert Lea, mist at rhe Great Lakes Experiment Station, Res. 74 5 W . College Ave., Appleton. Minn. Mandan, N . D. He is married and has two children. W. J. Matson Dr. L. F. Moses Wesley J. Matson '48Ed, is teaching in Practicing dentistry in Charleston, W. Warren Hanson the junior high school at Santa Maria, Va., is Leo F. Moses '44DDS. Address : Warren Hanson '47Ag, formerly in the alif. Res.: 400 East Main t. Third Floor, Capitol City Bldg. agronomy department at Purdue University, Florence L. Ander on now is assistant professor of plant genetics Assistant director of srudent personnel '45 and statistics in the Department of Agron Doro/h} IoI cNttll, Western lIIino:s State 01- and placement at Gustavus Adolphus Col lege, Macomh, III . correspondent. omy at the University of Florida. lege, St. Peter, Minn., is Florence L. Ander son '48Ed. Ina J. Jarvinen Dr. R. A. Good Ina J. Jarvinen '45Ed, is teaching Eng Robert A , Good '44BA;'46MB;'47MD& '49 Hy Hoffman , 716 Tentb Ave_ SE., MIOne lish in the Disrrict 40 ju nior hi~h school PhD, was one of 20 medical scientists to apolis 14, correspondent, at Chisholm, Minn. Res.: 602 Adams Ave., receive the John and Mary H . Markle Foun Eveleth, Minn. dation award for 1950. The University Med R. R. Reilly ical School will receive 5,000 yearly for Raymond R. Reilly 19 6-49, is now as raig Burns five years to enable Dr. Good ro pursue his sistant manager for Buttrey rares, Inc.. in Westwood, Calif., where Craig Burns research in rheumatic fever. He is spend Sioux Falls, D. Mrs. Reilly, the former '42BA;'43B ;'4 MB;'4 5MD, is practicing ing the present academic year in research Bemadette A . Eves/age MedT, is a medical medicine, is a lumber town a mile up in at the Rockefeller Instirute. technician for the ioux Falls Clinic. Res.: the ierra Nevada mountains, he reported 1801 . Main. ina note ra the Class of 1945 correspon M. E. Brunzell David Moore dent. Dr. Burns and his wife (Eleanor Alyrle B. Bmllzell '47Ed, is teaching in David i\'foore' 9BA, is spoers director of Lindeman '4 1BA) have four children. the junior high school at Twin Falls, radio station WBCK at Battle reek, Mich. ldaho. Res.: 227 ixih Ave. N. '46 C. R. Odin Clyde R. Odill ' 9Ag, is a graduate ru HarNel Schaffer, Peck & Peck, 581 Fifth Ave., '48 dent in wild life management at the Uni N . Y , N . Y., correspondent. Edward wa.'ss, 1355 Elmdale, hi c.go, Ill., versity of Utah. Address p, . Box 41 . correspondenc. R. K. orem Logan, Utah. Ronald K. Sorem '46BA;'48M , former Albina A. Bozym J. N. mith J, N. Smith '49BA, ha entered emplo)' ly of Houlran, Me., is now a geologist with Albina A . Bozym '48BS, is a public of the Armstrong ork o. at Lanca ter, the U. S. Geological ucvey, stationed in health nurse at the U. of K. medical center, Pa., and is in the company's glass and clo Manila, P. 1., and engaged in a srudy of Kansas ity, Kun. Philippine are deposits in cooperation with sure division sales training program. He the Philippine Bureau of Mines. He and Carolyn Auten was drum major of the Universiry band Mrs. orem expecc ra remain in the Philip· arolYll Allten '4SB , is a dietitian for and a member of the concert band, and was pines twO years. Address : U. S. Geological the rauffer orporation in hicago. Res.: a member of Phi igma Phi, quare and urvey, c/ o American Embassy, APO 736, 5316 ornell Ave., Apt. 908. ompass, and Am ia. Manila, Philippines, c/ o Postmaster, San G. R. R aymond Francisco. Joyce M. Batson Gordo!) R. Raymo17d ' 9BusA, now is Joyce M , Balsoll ' 8Ed, is making her living in Lo Angeles, alif., where he is Laurene Tibbett home at 306 E. ypres street, anta Maria, employed by the 0 cidental Life insurance For ranking as a finalist in a recent alif., while teaching junior high school o. of alifornia. Addres: 812 outh national women's civic activities contest, social srudies and Engli h, stalinn t., Los Angeles 5. 271 MAY-JUNE, 1950 '01 Elizabeth McGregor '38 Elizabeth McGregor 'O IPhB, April 1 in Mr. a nd Mr . E. O. Helland t. Paul at age 74. he was superintendent of Gillene scate hospital for crippled chilo ErUng O. Helland '38CivE&BusA, and dren in t. Paul for 35 years previous to MrJ. Helland (Thordis Tanner) '37BS, her reriremenr last October. have reponed the birth of their third son, Robert Earl, Nov. 26. Address: 3322 East 'II One Forty·fifth t., Cleveland 20, Ohio. A. W . P eterson Albert W. Peterson 'l1Phm, in Minne· '41 apolis Feb. 10 at age 63. He was pres~deot Me. and Mr . Ma rshall Houts of the Tension Envelope Corp. of .Minoe sota and had been with tbat firm for 22 To MarJhall HOllt] '41BSL&LLB, and years. Airs. HOlltJ ( Mary O. Dealy) '43Ed, of PipestOne, Minn., a daughter, Marsha Jane, , 18 Jan. 17. Dr. J. R. Srurre J. R. Stlme ' 17B ;' 18MB&MD , farch '42 2 in Minneapolis ar age 55. He was a depUe}' coconer of Hennepin County, presi Mr. and Mrs. Harold Thomes denr of the [innesota division of the To Harold Thornes '42Ag, and M". Izaak Walton League, and a former na Thome] ( Delores Matson) '49H Ec, a tional director of the league. daughter, Deborah Lynn, March 10. Carol Jean Raymond '48N&Ed , has To Herbert Croom ' 2Ag and Mrs. become a stewardess for Un ited Air '20 Croom, a son, Jon Will iam. Croom is on Lines fo ll owing completion of a five· {rs. G. W . ord all the staff of the West Central chool of week training course at Cheyenne, W yo. ,)In. Glen If/. ordt'gll ( Clarice Kraft) Agriculture at Morris, Minn. She serves on Ma inliner planes fly ing '20Ed, March 15 in Minneapolis ar age out of San Francisco. Mr. and M r . Robert Tess mer 53. he bad taught in taples, D assel, Hasr ings, and Minneapolis, [inn. To Robert Teumer 19 1-42, and Mrs. Tessmer, of Alexa ndria, Mi nn .. a daughter, '25 Jan. 16. PROMOTED AT B FF ALO L. E. Peterson Letl'ell)'l1 Z. GroSJ '36BA;'39MA;'47- Leu'iJ E. Petenon '25B ;'29M ;'34EE, '44 PhD, was one of th ree men advanced to a March 1 in Des Moines, Iowa, of a hean fu ll professorship last month in the Col· attack. With the orthwestero Bell Tele D. L. Gilbert on lege of Arts and ciences at the University phone Co. since 1929, he helped develop . Demm L. G,lbertJOIl '4 ChernE, and of Buffalo. He bas been a member of the radar during the war and was active in Mrs. GilbertSon of Tulsa, Okla., are the univer51ty Deparrment of ociology and deveJopmeor of long discan e coaxial cable parents of a daughter, Christi ne Elaine, Anrhropology for six years and was a transmission lines, station to car rwo·way born la t Dec. 22. They also have a son, teach i ng assiscant in sociology at Minnesoca radio, and tele ision. Eric illiam. in 1941-42. Mrs . Gras is the former Gene/!;el'e BIUmgJ . 3 U 01. Dr. r. Z ipper man '47 D r. Herrmann E. Bozer '22M , wbo M . Zipperman '2SDD, [arch 11, heads the Buffalo univer ity's Department in Los Angeles, Calif., at age 53. He had N orma n Krog of OtO laryngology, was appoinred a can· pra riced there for the pa t 1 years and To Norman Krog , 7Ag, and Mrs. Krog, su ltant in the university' peech linic. before that in Minneapoli . a son, Kimberley Norma n. Krog is a graduate student in plant pathology on '33 the t. Paul campus. HEAD ENGINEER De. . G. ruck fr. a nd Mrs. R. E. Ander on D r. \Y'alter G. tuck '33 [. larch 21 To Robert E. AndersoTl ' 7IT, and ilIrs. A Minnesota trained engineer, . L. at age 45. He was a fayo Foundation Anderson Uo Ane Petersen) 1945, a son, tolte '2 ArchE, has been elected presidenr fellow 19'0-3c l, after which he practiced Peter Monroe. Anderson is an analyzing of the arional oaety of Profe ional orthopedic surgery in an Antonio, Texa . Engi neer . tolte is an architect and engi. en ineer with the Bell Telephone Labora· '39 tories in New York ity. Res.: Jacob Ford neer with a t. Paul archirectural firm. He is chairman of the Minneapoli Housing Village, Bldg. 13, Apt. 7A, MorristOwn, H . K . H arri on . J. and Redevelopment Authorie}" Harry Kimball (Kim ) HarriJoll "9J, [arch 24 at age 33. He was ad erti ing Mr. and Mr . B. E. Bergersen manager of the ortbero tates Envelope To B. Edward BergerJen '47Ag, and Co. of t. Paul, ;1 member of igma Delta Mts. Bergersen, a son. Papa is laborator hi and Alpha Tau mega. direct r at the Roben Dairy Co., maha, '86 eb. Re .: 019 Fourty·fourth t. '46 [r . F. H . ouper a lia e H . ndee n '48 Mn FranCl] H. Cot/per (Fanny Hagan) Wallace H. A,d flOll . ~6ChemE, t 1 -86, of Minnetonka Bach, Lake [in· Philadelphia [arch T, a the re ult of an Florian Ono netonka, March 30 at age g·L Formedy automobile collision a few day pre IOU I '. To Flol'lan 0110 'I Ag, and Ir . no, acti e in ci i affair, he had been a memo The other dri er w reponed to have been a son, Da id lemen , 1ae h 1. ber f the board of Jone ·Harri on Home. drunk and driving without lighr . "It offered independence , security, unlimited earning possibilities" A undergraduate at the Uni ersity of Iichigan during the early years of the war I was not too imme diately concerned about a career. I knew that Uncle am would oon olve that problem for me. However, I had always been favorably inclined toward life insurance, for my Dad had been associated with e\ England 1utual for almo t 20 years. And hi sati faction with his career has been evident in hi everyday life and in the home he has provided for our famil '. So when the Army sent me to a training camp near Boston, I looked up orne of the men in ew England Iutual's homc office. t the same time, I met the girl and married her, and naturally I began to think more definitely about a post- rrn career. Together w cataloged the advantages and disadvantages of many diffcrent carcer . But each time we came back to life insurance. It offered - in a way no other career eemed to - inde pendence, ecurity, public scrvice, and unlimited earning po sibilities. a re ult of these deliberations, I cnrolled in ew England l\Iutual's basic training course while I was still in the rm ir Corp . fter the war - in pril of 1946 to be exact - I jowed the ew England l\Iutual agency in Denver. In addition to extcn ive training here in Denver, I have had two cour e at the home office in Boston. I have al 0 attended several in piring rcgional meet ing and ha\'e enjoyed and profited from my -+-year a ociation with thi company. I have made a much bctter living than would have bcen possible in a alaried job, and I have saved a substantial fund for future nced. t the present time, I am pcnding half my time working with the new mcn in our agency, helping them find the same satis factions that I ha\'e cnjoyed as a career life underwriter. Robal N. Sa ... "t/s and jamily, Dtnvu, COUJu"Jo These Un ivers ity of Minnesoto men a re New England Mutual Recent graduates of our Home Office training course, re prese ntatives: although new to the life insurance business, earn average John A. H ummel, 99, St. Paul first' }eaI commissions of 3600-which, with renewal com Louis M. Schaller, '29, Minnea polis Robert D. Davis, '30, St. Paul missions added, brings the total yearly income average to Mailand E. Lane, Sr., '32, Minnea polis 5700. From here, incomes rise in direct proportion to each Hubert D. Wheeler, Ag ency Mg r., '34, Duluth individual's ability and industry. Fred W. Gould, '35, St. Paul Francis " Pug " Lund, Agency Mg r., '35, Minneapolis If you'd like information about a career that gives you a Lloyd V. Shold, '42, St. Paul bu iness of your own, with no low climb up a seniority Earl H. Mosiman, '47, Minnea polis ladder and no ceiling on earnings, wTlte l\1T. H . C. Chaney, Franklin W. G ogins, Jr., '48, Duluth Theodore J. Lee, '49, Du l\Jth Dlfector of gencles, 501 Boylston treet, Boston I ,:'-\as5. They can give y ou e xpert counsel on "living Insuranceu-o unique ly liberal and fl exible life insurance progrom tailored to fit your The NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY family'S need •.