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THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

Homecoming Issue I SEPTEMBER 1968 By of 1968 well probably be the second h!rgest car rental COl11pany.

Our man in charge of " people people" standards.

The way things are going, only one (mostly GM cars) again and again. people as fast as we can without en­ car rental company will have more But it's made us scramble to main­ dangering our high tandard . We locations than National at the end tain our "people people" standard . may be No.2 by the end of 1968, of 1968. To help, we've installed a new in­ but you'll still be No.1. Making the customer No. 1 paid stant reservations confirmation sy - off: we grew at twice the rate of our tern. (Like our S & H Green Stamps, competitors last year, nearly doubl ed o ur competitors don't have it.) our locations and increased our fleet And we're adding cars and good

National Car Rental ... the people people.

In Ca nod. and thfoughout till'! world, II's TILOEN lnlerNATlONAL ATTEND MINNESOTA HOMECOMING PEP FEST LUNCHEON Hotel Radisson, Thursday, October 10 North Star Ballroom -12:00 noon

Meet Coach Murray Warmath Athletic Director Marsh Ryman Homecoming Chairman Jim Hemak Homecoming Queen 1968

Enjoy U of M Men's Club U of M Pep Band Porn Porn Girls

Cheer with Gophers U of M Cheerleaders

COLOR - SONGS - YELLS - PEP TALKS - FUN - FRIVOLITY - FOOD

DON'T MISS IT - SEND YOUR RESERVATION IN TODAY.

Clip and send to The Minnesota Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Union, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455.

Dear Homecoming Committee:

Count me in! Please reserve ___ places at $4.00 each for the Big Homecoming Luncheon, October 10, Hotel Radisson, 12:00 noon.

Nome ______

Address, ______

Amount Enclosed _____

EPTE~1BER , 19 3 Received at 205 Coffman Has the "I am just \ riling to expr ss m approval of yow' xcell lit lema to the Minnesota hllnni ssocia­ new job tion in the lay 196 dition of AL M I EW . "w will n ver gain 'The ? Am erican Dream' until our afflu ent Americans how conc rn and ac­ gotten old tually b come involved in helping • th dis nfranchi ed per ons in our country gain at least ome hope If it ha s ••• then the it will take you and opportunit . "I think most colleg peopl be­ to fill out this coupon could be the most important lieve they are succes ful b cause of three minutes of you r ca reer. their hard work and actually this i only a half truth becaus th y We're Management Recruiters. to assure reliability and results. also had the opportunit and hope The "matchmakers." Professionally We have successfully matched to attend call g primarily by th ir dedicated to bringing together the over 50,000 men with 5,000 of the birth into a family and community job requirements of industry and best companies in the country. that gave them a chance." the individual. We can make a successful match John L. Gildn r, We have 62 offices in the U. S. for you, too. In just five days, you 'll Major, USAF, MC and Canada, employing a unique have the entire matchmaker organi­ Ho pital Admini b.·a tor method of counseling with spe­ zation working for you - if you ('64MHA) cific industries and professions mail this quick-fact form today.

r------~ "Congratulations on your femo in NATIONAL ALUMNI SERVICES DIRECTOR the ALUM I EWS for May! I Management Recruiters International read it with deep interes t last eve­ 1001 Euclid Avenue - 5th Floor. Cleveland, Ohio 44115 ning. "The pamphlet, 'w Don't Belong Name ______in Vietnam,' which I published r - Address ______cently is a am what imilar appeal for mericans to help improv our City, ______State ____ Zip,______foreign policy. Your i a imilar Pho n e: ______o Office o appeal for a bctter dam stic atti­ tude. I have even thought, serious­ College or University Attended ______ly, about trying my hand at another Major______Degree ______year ______pamphlet on the domes tic situation. "Your naming th present prob­ lem ' low canc r f rmenting' in­ Presen t Position. Describe ______terests m because I have thought of it in th same terms. "This nation was born with th cancer of duplicity or, as Lincoln Incom e Range: 0 $7 ,000 - $11,000 o $11,000 - $14.500 called it, 'hypocrisy.' We d clar d o $14.500 - $19.0 00 Dover $19,000 loudly that 'all men ar cr ated qual' and with 'inalienabl lights.' Career Objective : ______At the same time, we maintained a slave conomy. When we b gan our onstitution with uch WOI'] as establish ju tice, general welfare, All repl ies treated confide ntially. th e bl ss in gs of Jib rty, we left th at • Corporate clients assume our fee !Vfanagt;ment canc I' in the body politic. Co ntinued on page 7 RecrUiters 4 ~ ______The matchmakers A Continuing the Minnesota Alumni Weekly which was estab­ lished in 1901, the Minnesota Alumni Voice and the Gopher Grad. Published monthly from Se pte mbe r through June by the Minnesota Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Union, Un iver­ si ty of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 55455. Member of the Ameri­ can Alumni Council. nm 'IVERSITY OF MIN E OTA THE FO OED TIl E F lTII TIlA T ME ARE E OBLED UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA. BY DER TA ur C DEDICATED TO THE ADVA CEME T F LEARNINC AND THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH DEVOTED TO THE IN TR CTlON OF YOUTH AND THE WELFARE OF THE STATE ALUMNI THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Edwin L Hoislet '31 BSEd '33MA '38EdD Executive Director Executive Committee Kenneth C Gloser '428BA President Jomes A Wotson '42BA First Vice President Horry Heltzer '33METE Second Vice President NEWS Florence M. Lehmann '23BA Secretary (Ollr 68th Year) Wallace L. Boss '288S8us Treasurer Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA Past President Oscar R. Knutson '27LLB Board Member Howard F. Woo '27BA '31 BArch Board Member SEPTEMBER, 196 VOL. 6 0.1 Otto W Quale '40BAJourn Board Member J Roscoe Furber '24EE Board Member Maynard A. Speece '43BSAgEd Board Member RIChard E. Kyle, Sr. '27LLB Board Member 6 Memo from Ed Hai let Term ex pores 1969: John Henry Aides '38MD, Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA, Grant Johnson '38BSEd '40MA, Richard E. Kyle, Sr. '27LLB, Edwin 8 Introducing Ken Gl a r. ew A. Martini '23BA '30LLB, Robert W . Olson '38BEE, James G. Peterson '40BAAero '49MA, Otto W . Quale '40BAJourn. Expires 1970: Carl M. MAA Pre ident Anderson '27BA '30LLB, Francis M. Boddy '30BA '36MA '39PhD, Wallace L. Boss '28BSBus, Kenneth C. Glaser '428BA, Mrs. Dixie Ingersoll Goss II Something Old, Something e 15BA, Florence M. Lehmann '23BA, Melvin O. Sletten '35DDS, William F. White '49BAJourn. Expires 1971 : Harry Heltzer '33METE, Oscar R. Hom coming'6 Knutson '27LLB, Sheldon M. Logaard '418S '43MB '43MD, Mrs. Jeannei1e R. Piccard '42PhD, James A. Watson '42BA. Howard F. Woo '27BA 14 Inter ie with Minne ota' \ armath '31 BArch. At-large members, expires 1971, Irene D. Kreidberg '30BBA, Carl Woie '50BEE. Expires 1972: Hermon J. Arnott '24BA, J. Roscoe Furber ' 24EE, Mrs. Violet Rosacker Graf '33-37, Maynard A. Speece 15 Goph r Football Outlook '43BSAgEd, Charles H Withers '49BAJourn. Representing the Constituent Alumni Associations: Virginia 8echtal 1 The 1969 Scandina ia-Ru ian Tour '38BS, President, Minnesota Alumnae Club; William H. Ziemer '48BSFor '55BBA, President, College of Agriculture, Forestry and Home Economics 20 Thi i a Uni er it Alumni Associotian; Richard B. Weigel '42B8A, President, School of Business Administration Alumni Association; Dr. Walter S. Warpeha '38DDS, PreSident, School of Dentistry Alumni Association; James Garner lumni Book h If '57BSEd, President, College of Education Alumni Association; Dr. Ken­ neth P Manick '56BA '60BS '60MD, President, Medical Alumni Associa­ 25 B ard M mb r tion; Stuart Starner '65BA, President, University of Minnesota, Morris, Alumni Association; Robert G. Werness '53AMS, President, Mortuary Science Alumni Association; Mrs. Charlotte Linster Boyles '54BSN, Presi­ The ni er it dent, School of NurSing Alumnae Association; Roland O . Leuzinger '55BSPhm, President, College of Pharmacy Alumni AssoCiation; Mrs 34 Th Alumni Joan Keaveny Scali '47BA, President, College of Liberal Arts and Uni­ versity College Alumni Association; W. L. Hindermonn '29BSCE ' 37MSCE, President, Institute of Technology Alumni Associotion; Robert A. Martens lumni '56DVM, President, Veterinary Medicol Alumni Associotion; Catherine A. Rosness '48MSW, President, School of Social Work Alumni Associa­ round bout tion; Mrs. Mory Neamon Diessner '37GDH, President, Dental Hyg iene Alumnae AssOCiation; Robert B. Roessel '58AA '60BSEd, President, Gen­ 4 1 D ath eral College Alumni Association; Mrs. Potricia Bordewich '52BS '62MS President, Division of Medicol Technology Alumni Associotion; President, Occupational ond Physicol Theropy Alumni Associotion - to be elected. Representing non-constituent groups: Julius E. Dovis '33UB, President, Mary Lou Aurell '62BAJourn Editor law Alumni Association; James R. Soltou '56BS, President "M" Club. Edwin L. Haislet '31 BSEd '33MA '37EdD Managing Editor Po st Presidents ond Alumni Fund Advisory Committee Russell E. Backstrom '25BSME '27MSME, William F. Braasch 'OO BS '03MD, Wendell T. Burns ' 16BA, Vietor Chrlstgau '24BSAg, George Earl '06BA Second closs postage paid at Minneapolis, Minn., under Act of '09MD, Fronklin D. Groy '25BA, Woldo E. Hordell '26BSBus, Hibbert Congress of March 3, 1879. Annual dues of the Association are M. Hill '23BSCE, J. D. Holtzermonn, '21BA, Arthur R. Hustod ' 16BA, $10 of which $8 constitutes a year's subscription to the Alumni Francis A. Lund '3 1-'35, Virgil J. P. Lu ndquist '43MD, Joseph Moun News. Subscription for non-alumni: $10 per year National ad­ '32BA '35LLB, Ho rvey Nelson '22BS '25MD, Charles Judd Ringer '38-'41 , vertising representatives: American Alumni Magazines, Glenn E. Seidel '36ME, Edwin A. Willson '30BEE, Wells J. Wright '36BSL NY. Publisher: Minnesota Alumni ASSOCiation , 205 Coffman '36LLB, Edgor F. Zelle ' 13BA. Union, University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455. Honorary Life Association Members Dr J. L. Morrill, President Emeritus of the Universi ty; William T. 5 Middlebrook, Vice President Emeritus of the Un iversity; Dr O . Meredith Wilson ; Gerold T. Mullin. MEMO 11111111111111111111111111111111111111'11111111111111111111111111111111111'1'11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11111111111111 11 111111111111111 From ED HAISLET Executive Director

SUBJECT 1967-68 Was a Good Year

By the time the September issue of the Alumni News is in the mail the MAA Annual Report for the 1967-68 year will be out. It was a productive year. A new membership fee was put into effect with a resulting increase in needed income and a loss in membership of only 3.6%. The long time objective of producing an alumni film was achieved. A 15 minute, sound, color film, "Minnesota, Then and Now" was co-sponsored with the Farmers & Mechanics Bank. The eight copies of the film were kept busy from September through June and will be available again this year. A weekend Seminar was tried for with favorable acceptance. An alumni tour to Scandinavia and Russia was authorized for July 1969. The editorial in the June issue of the Alumni News resulted in 35 reservations. Full details are announced for the first time in this issue of the Alumni News. If you are int:rested, I suggest you let us hear from you just as soon as possible because the number that can be accepted is limited. Two long needed staff positions were authorized bringing the total number of staff to thirteen. The secretarial staff consists of Mrs. Jean Corey, Principal Secretary; Mrs. Ruth Dickie, Secretary; Miss Ruth Hesselink, Senior Clerk Typist; Miss Kathryn Olson, Senior Clerk Typist; Mrs. Mar­ garet Ezzell, Senior Secretary; and Mrs. Jeanne Vale, Secretary of the Fund Office. Mrs. Beverly Weiss works one day a week on Alumni Club memberships. I want you to meet the Alumni Office Staff including the two new appointments. Joining the staff as of July 1 were:

Bart Kersteter, '60BA, as Assistant Director, Alumni Fund. He was an administra· tive fellow in the Office of Admissions and Records and for the past two years headed up the Freshman Scholarship Program of the Bureau of Loans and Scholarships. He is a candidate for the PhD degree. His responsibility will be the Alumni Fund.

Warren Headley, '40Journalism, comes to the Association with an extensive back­ ground in advertiSing and sales promotion. He will write and edit copy, coordi­ nate the work of the printer, mailer and post office.

L M I E\ Dennis Swan, '61BA, Assistant Director, has been a member of the Alumni staff since 1961. He started as a field representative and for the past five years his re­ sponsibility has been the constituent alumni groups.

Janet Hart Widseth, '39BSHE, Assistant Director, joined the Alumni steff in 1962 after serving on the Alumni Board for four years. Starting out as an Assistant To the Director in charge of alumnae and reunion programs, she now assists the di­ rector in the overall administration of the work of the Association.

Chester Tomczyk, '51BSEd, Assistant Director, joined the Alumni staff in 1963 as field representative. Now in charge of field services, he is an "M" man, having lettered in basketball in 1945-46-47-48.

Mary Lou AurelL '62BAJourn, joined the staff in May 1968 as Editor of the Alumni News, after 6 years as Executive Production Editor for Leland Publishing Com­ pany.

You will find the 1967-68 annual report full of pertinent information and it will be sent to you upon request.

Sincerely, ~~

Received at Ed. 1 ote: ~[r . Barnum' pamphlet, "We Don't Belong in ietnam," i the re ult of a "twill f eling of r - ATTEND 205 Coffman oil and d ire to help: ' H ha COll l ilill d frOI1l page .J turned hi thought , He 01 ed 10 \ - 1. 0 r a thr - ear p riod," and a HOMECOMING "\vh n the ane r got so mali g­ (f neral hi torical backgrounding nant lhat it almost kill d th into a p rsonally oh rent indi t­ in th ~ 1 60 , \ mad a jab at 1968! m nt f . . policie in ietnam. r moving the ane r, but n r fin ­ opi of th pamphl t ar avail­ ish 1 th job. 0 wond r we ha able, fr e, from VTU P. Barnum, October 8-12 our trou ble . .:' 3355 \ il hir B1 d., Lo n Ie , yru P. Barnum '04 L alif. 90005. EPTE lBER, 1 6 7 I 1957 th d an of the h 01 f Bu in 's all d a group of its alumni tog ther in th ampu lub of offman nion. Th purpos of th e m ting wa to form an acti alumni con titu nt group. Ken la r b eam th third pr id nt of this group in 1959. n in 195 the hool of Busin 5S' nnual Institut \ c S m cd off- ampu , to downtown Minn apoli int th Leamington Hot l. 11 typ e of prof s ional organization - tho e that involved bu - in s - w re onta t d and ask d to participat . n ntire da 's program" a plann d . " t thi fi r t v ntur we had 00 peopl " K n CIa er told the hmmi \. "It really took off! I rememb r the hotel per onn 1 carr ing in table to tak care of ev rybody . . ." This f lIDat for th Annual Institute has been main­ tained, and b cause of its ucc K n CIa er rec ived th first Certificate of M rit, ov mb r 19, 1959, in r cognition of distingui h d ervi to tb School of Busi ne s dministration. Ken \ as also a m mb r of th 1inn ota lumni so iation's board of dire tor in 19.5 -59, and in 1963 to the present. He was th 1 's tr a urer in 1966-67 and its vic PI' sident in 1967-6 . In th choo1 of Bu in s lumni s ociation K 11 worked closely with two past J pI' sidents, \ aldo INTRODUCING Hal'dell and 1 H imba h. Th ir progr sion to th PI' sid !ley of the t-,II A was I' vcrs d from that in thc constitu nt organization. Th 1 has b 11 fit cl from th lead rship of thes thre men, ho h ave KEN GLASER work d wIland nthu ia ti all y tog th r through many y ar . During his intervi w \ ith th e NewMAA CIa er outlined ome of th admini tration program. "Ex cutive Dir ctor Ed IIaislet and m s If \ ill President mak just as many contact as we possibl , can with all onstituent group " h aid. Tog th r th y , ill s what can b don to build and to get all of th groups to build tog th r. Th ir work will includ in tate and out tate groups. It is of prime imporlan . , la r f Is, to bring th tory of the niv rsity to thes groups and to mak ' th m f I a clo r ti to th e ni ersit . H find thi a sp cial r spon ibility \ ith a n w ni er it)' pr s­ id nt 1 ading th in titution. " part of our program \ a1' going to mak a cond movi which b gin with th inauguration f Pr sident Moos," CIa r said. "This will brad for us in the ady spring." II pOint d to th 1 gi lativ essions up oming this y aI', and to th plans which ar bing made for a numb r of I gislntiv 'o ntncts - through fo tball I JI1 h on , del gation linn rs, 1 gi lativ work hops \ hich will carr th story f th ni l' it from th alumni i wpoint and g 11 ral a i tanc . In 196 -69 th foe IS will b on th ni r it ' propo d building program, particular] on th 'V t Bank d lopm nl. 8 LU INI NEW K n also [ Is that th niv r ity hould b "a tion of individual rental op rators lik Gla er and prim somc of m di al knowl d and per onn 1." hi a so iat . H b cam pre ident of the group in nd h i 100lOng toward a pro ram that will make 1959-60. th ni ersity ho pital and it medical school the , ith furth r expan ion, the central office of 'CR hub of m dicin in th pp r lidw t. mo d to ew York. In 196.5 a bank a ked orne of ~ J an) or th sso iation' pa t program will be th R memb r , including laser, to fonn a man­ continued, particularl th work with th lumni ag ment team to bring th then floundering company lub in th beraton-Ritz Hotel. K n f I that "the ba k to it feet. They agr ed to - only if the moved lumni lub will gro\ and contribute a gr at d al back to linneapolis. 0 R wa pack d up, "lock, t th University and to th lumni s ociation." tock and barrel, computer and all, and moved." Th current re pon to the 1969 lumni Tour to en p ople mad the return trip. An employ­ candana ia and Russia for him i a trem ndou indi­ ment offic wa opened and a building found in the cation of th pirit and enthusia m of the ssociation. t. Louis Park Industrial Park d velopment area. "B au \ have a new niver it pr ident, \ e Anoth r 70 to 80 people were hired. This manage- must becom as \ 11 a quainted with him a po sible, and a sur him that th lumni ociation i behind him -1 perc nt. Th a suranc of an acti e and large alumni group \ ill b a real b neBt to him." K 11 said that h i al 0 aware of th spac n ds of the s ociation's office , and that this ear ground­ work \ ill b laid for ne\ quart rs. The pr id ntial minar will b ontinu d ; th r \\ill be thrc me tin again, on h ad d b Gla er, and the oth r b th two ic pre id nt of 1 th y might b om orient d to program. Ken aid, "Th r i pI nty to do - ther no (lU lion about th, t." r There i plenty to do· there i no question about that . .. "

EPTE lBER, 196 9 rrBecause we have a new University president, we n1ust become well acquaintedw ith him."

ment team brought a loss corporation to a million L asin g sso iation, 195 -5 , and currently a m mb r dollar pront last quarter. of it board of director ; a m mb r of th board of The company now employs 1,500 p opIe, has over directors of the tate Bond & fortgage ompany of 17,000 cars and trucks on I a e, and over 18,000 on w 1m, linne ota; sat on th Gen ral 10tor rental. And th organization is in a posture of growth Presid nt's Ad visory Board in 1963-64; i a m mb r and enthusiasm which reaffirms Ken Gl aser's faith of th dvisory Board of the orth m rican ffic in the Minneapolis area. of orthwestern ational Bank, linneapolis, and Ken is currently chairman of the board of ationa! is pre id nt of th Twin Citi s Ch vrol t D aIel'S As­ Car Rental Syst m , Inc.; L nd Leas Transportation sociation. Company of ebraska, Inc.; L nd Lease Transporta­ la l' says that he has nough xtra urricular a - tion Company of Georgia, Inc.; Lend Leas - ational tivity to keep him bu . Still h tray I , tensiv I , of Ohio, Inc.; National Car and Truck R ntal, Inc.; bclonging to th 100,000-mil club of each of the Lend L as Daily Car Rental, Inc. ; ar Rental , Inc. , ai.rlines. and presid nt and own I' of Ken-Ray Ch vroI et, Inc. His busin ess and civic a ti viti s ompl m nt one For K n Glaser p ople are numb I' one. This f el­ anoth er. Ken f els that ou cannot di a ociat th m. ing is th s cr t of his success. In his own words, "If on contribut \! hoI h artedl to a civic or a "Business is people. We are th peopl 's p opl ." frat m al group, you d n't se k any busin ss l' \ ards. Glas I' ha be n and is involved in many manag - Th y com e naturall y. nd you gain connd 11 and m nt teams. H e was a memb l' of the Alumni Com­ mutual r p ct as a con equ nc ." mitte to lect a new Univ rSity pr ident in 1967; K n i d epl in volv d ci i 1 . Thi nerg ti man was appointed a non-acad mic member of past Uni­ is a m mb r of th board of elir ct I'S of the Y II , v rsity Pr sident Morrill's committ e for th 1 ction an organization he has work d with sinc hi oll ege of a new d an for th Busin ss School. In th latt r da ; a m mb r of th Chamb r of Comm I' e; an capacity h att nd d 27 me tings and p rsonall y vis­ acti ve committ m mb I' and vi PI' iel nt of th ited the Purdue and G org \Vashington ampus s, iinn apoli. Rotary; a m mb 'r of th board of dire - intervi wing pot ntiai candidat s. He has fW'ni h d tors of lI sta ns dolph liS oil g and a lTlemh I' of b'ansportation for th U of M athletic c1 partmcnt th board of Fairvi \V Hospital. whcn it was nece sary. nd this year h also nthllsias ti ally J aels tb Ken i a pas t pI' sid nt of th Am rican Aulomoti ' ~I ! 10 LU 1 I EW Something Old, Something New, Something for Y ou In• HOMECOMING 1968

WEL ~IE L M I - to a p cial pr ie\ of the 196 niversit of ~IioDe ota Goph r Home- coming! The f tiviti , which \ ill open \ ith sp cial cere­ moni s on Octob r 7, culminate on th 12th \ hen th oph r lev n take on a tough Illinois t am to "B lack n th Illin- " in victory. bu in s politic and entertainment. Time and place of this Hom coming - a with Hom - '\liIl b announc d at a later date. comin on campus all a er our nation - d P nds to a Iarg part on au, and our g t up aod go. Thi Wednesday, October 9, is filled with the excitement year a Iarg r, aa r collegiat Hom coming committee, of ... th Coronation of the 196 Homecomin Queen along with th nthu ia tic backing of Executi and her court, preceded by a Concert ill ortllrop Dir ctor Ed Haisl t of th ~Iinne ota Iumni ocia­ tlditorillm at pm. Traditionally, the Pre ident of the tion, ~lar h R man of th thl ti Departm nt, Bill ~Iinn ota lumni ociation crown the n w queen; unn of R lation and th ariou all g thi ar ware proud to have I Pre ident Ken offi ,hav impr ed th importanc of 'au - and Gla r a i t in the honor of th Coronation. our d finitiv role - into th 196 v nt . ur aim in 1 i ,a Ed Hai I t ha aid a \ ell, "to bring ba k to th campu those \ ho ha known and c,o har pro riel, in th ollegiat abno­ ph rand prid of a gr at in titution!" W \ ant thi , lh 196 Homecoming, t succeed a a Homecoming n v r ha b fore - and \ e need your supp rt and pr n to llC d. \Y ar not aoing to boast prematur I that 196 will b th "bigg t and b t" (' r in Homecoming . You will hav to am , to for 'our 'eI es, that th "bigge~t and b f' i th YOUR highlight of the week comes Thursday, wa w hay plann d it . .. p cialI), for you. October 10 . . . if vou att nd tll nool1 i\I illl1e ota H01lleeomin a Pep p' st LUllch 011 ill the 1 ortll tal' Ballroom of the Hotel Rodi 011 . Thi i th pportun tim to aather with old and new friend to remini c and to look to the pirit and th future of Our ni­ ver it with Hom coming hairman Jim H mak, the to/tina at noon in th newl cro\\,o d Home omina Qu n and man oth r . t'n t i fre al I op n oa h Muna 'Varmath and thl tic Dir tor ~Iar h Ryman will b th r with au, to gi e par­ ti ular in iaht int th lip oming Home oming gam betwe n ~linn ota and IIlin i . d th of ~I h rleader, al ng , ith th P p Band and len' 1 lub, are eaa r to lead 'au in the pirit d J\Iinn _ he l' and ong old and n "'. Th ti ket for th Lunch on wlti hot ,too, \\ill be di ' tributed in blo k to the 1 all ae offic and tur ri , arranrred bv th tud nt com­ to "uri us rp rati n in th a1' a, and old inal\'. ou, will onlinu tllrol~ {!. hout til week­ Tick t call be pllrclw d from tll llimni [fie in ni r it pr fe rs and allU11ni, and p r­ 205 offmall Ilioll or at til leadinu deparfm nt tor sonaliti . 'all will wal t to h ar fr 111 th world 01 in dOlcn/olen linll opoli olld t. Po Ill. PTE ,IBER, 196 11 THE 1968 HOMECOMI G COMMITTEE is pictur d in fark B1'inde, Palll Yul , Damon ~, Greg York, Dol frollt of orthrop Auditorillm on the Minneapolis campus. Schatz! in, Stl i Kae s, cott Richardson and Twimwn Tit y include, from th left, front row: Call en Jargan, Jim H mak. Jean Odegarden, Eva Wriegard and Jennifer Cohen; secona Tho e committee member 1lot prc ent for th pi lure row: Mary Lutes, Jan Lock m, Marsha Fellman, helly were Kari Dahl, Sle e Gordon, lie' Carmich aZ, Jim Martin , Pukeis, St ephanie Ofstlwm Gnd Linda Stern ; third row: Pat 'Volfe, a ier Til/lOCO, Barb Ros. and Tom Quill.

Following th Lunch on, all avid football fans ar Th 196 Hom oming half-tim program, titl d invited to an Open Football Practice at Mem01'ial "Som thing Old, om thing \ , om thin* ," has, Stadium from 2:45 to 3:20 pm. 1 t the mighty 1in­ as Dir tor of Band r. B n ri cutto says, 'a portion n sota Gophers and th i.r coach ,who will xplain, to app al t the old l' alumni, a portion for th pI' nt play by play, what i happening on the field . Don't en ration, and brid th two group \ ith chool miss itl songs." Mr. ylin, a si ·tant band director, will I ad Hom oming is not Hom coming without house th combin d lumni Band - a traditional part of decorations. 111i year ov r 20 sororiti s, fratemiti s half-tim c remoni - and th of I Iarching and dormitories will b d orated along University Band th.rough a m dl y of ong , follo\ d b the v nue and its neighboring str ts. The decorations, introduction and brief pe h s of lumni Pre id nt to be completed and animat d by Friday noon, r main K n la er, Hom cominO' hairman Jim H mak and a colorful sight until Saturday night. Look for th th Hom coming Qu nand h r court. maps of d coration 10 ation in th n wspap 1'S during Aft l' th e Goph r "Bla k n th Illin- y " for the ir Hom oming week. What b tter tim than aft l' th fir t onf r DC victory, you ar invited to the mall!} game is there for you to vi it your frat rnityor ororityl open house at th a ad Inic and prof S ional sorol'ilie and frate'J'niti s, the religiOUS foundations and coll g . Events climax when Minnesota meets Illinois on Saturday, v ral of the coll g s ar having l' union in on­ October 12 ... game time i 1:00 pm. The niv rity jun tion with Hom com in 1 6 ; activi ti h l­ Marching Band wiII parad mu ically down 1'- uI d bcfor and aft r th gam. h k th li ling ity v fiU to th tadium at 12:15 pm. \ hi h follow this arti I . 12 L M I EW J T OTHER gro uJl of st ud illS? o. It's lhe 1968 lJ omecoming COlll111il1rr al u:ork ill an n raetic seslion.

A Victory on It op n oturday night's festi iti at 7:30 pm. f aturing th on and onl hri Montez. This i th fir t time that th one rt \ ill be h ld in orthrop uditorium. nd \V want to xpr sour particular thank to Director of oncert and Lectur Jam Lombard for curing th uditorium for u . A gala Homecom.ing Dance follows the oncert at 9 pm., when ev r on walk down the lall to off­ man nion to complet the evening with ent rtainment alumna Ir en and dancing to a good band. Tick ts are a ailabl on Kreidberg '30BR4 campu in offman nion at 4.00 p I' couple for the is ser ina as Ar­ one rt and the Dan ; 3.00 P r couple for th rangements Chair­ Dane only. man for the 196 For tho of ou coming to Homecoming from out Hom ecomin a of town, information booth will brady to er e ou Luncheoll to be at th h raton-Ritz, Radi on, L amington and oth r held at the Radi - on Holel ill f.Iinnc­ it ' hot 1 . Re I' ati ns hould b mad arl apoli~. Tick ts call be purclwed (1120- Coffman (lnioll, Unicer 'ty of iUin­ nesota, Minll eapoli

MISSING ?GOPHERS? The Alumni Office files are misslllg Gophers and issues of the Alumni Weekly. We generously and in good faith allow those who come in and ask, use copies of the Gopher and Alumni Weekly for histori­ cal research. They are not to be taken from the office - but these have disappeared. If you have a copy or copies that would help complete our flies, we would appreciate hearing from you.

Missing Gophers: 1929 1935 1940 1961 1962

Missing Minnesota Alumni Weekly: 1909-10, 1910- 11, 1911 - 12, 1912-13, 1915-16, 1916-17, 1917-18, 1923-24, 1924-25, 1926-27.

- Th 196 II 111 oming ommitt EPTE IBER, 1 6 13 M EDICAL HOMECOMING AN Six m dical reunions ar sched­ uled dUTin g the 196 Minn sota INTERVIEW Homecoming, October 11 and 12. The class me ting and their re­ spective chairman ar : WITH lass of 193 fBs-Dr. Linneus G. Idstrom; Clas of 1943MBs MINNESOTA'S ( D ecember Graduating CIa )­ Dr. Robert S m ch; Clas of MURRAY 1943MB ( farch Graduating Class) - Dr. Sheldon Lagaard; Class of 1948MBs-Dr. Anthony WARMATH Bianco; Class of 1953MDs-Dr. Frank Preston ; Clas of 195 - MDs- Dr. John Lest r. H eadquart rs for th we k nd will b the Leamington H ot 1. T entatively, r gistration will op n and a Continental Breakfast will be served at 8:30 am. on Friday, o tober 11. Later bus s will leave for the University and a tour of the hospital. An All-Medical hool Staff meeting in b yo Auditorium tackles Ez 11 Jon s and Ron Kam­ at noon will precede the pre enta­ "W E were murd r d by gradua- z lski hav all pro en th y can tion of scientific papers at 1:00 tion," Minn sota Head Football play Bi g T n football at a good pm. Buse will return to the Coach lurray Warmath said in an level, as ha e aptain 0 1 Jenk hotel in late aft moon in tim for Augu t telephon in t J'View with and offens nd hip Litt n, ac­ 6:30 pm. cocktails and dinner. th Alum ni ews. cording to \1 armath. And n w­ SatUTd ay morning brunch will b The Gophers los t 9 of 22 first comer Barry May r of Fargo, orth served in the hotel at 10:00 am. t am play l' and b tter than one­ Dakota, is xp ct d to d vel p before th bus s l ave fo r M mo­ third of the planned per onnel on strongly at fullback. rial Stadium and the Homecoming all teams. "Th niversity wa hurt Th fr shm n squads ar r­ gam b twe n Minnesota and Illi­ far mor than any other team in ported to hav x Uent balanc , nois. A block of tickets ha be n th Big T n," vVa rmath aid. being q ual! good on offen and re rved for M dical Alumni and \Vh n we a k freshm n to re­ defen e. their guests. plac seniors we d not have the This y ar Minnesota fac s a ball carriers, quarterback nor "tough chedul th t work to our lIperstars to build a t am around, di ad antag ," Warmath said. \Vhat AGRICULTURE REUNION Warmath explained. ons qu ntly might b his nightmare i a fan' Th 5th Annual H om coming Re­ we do not have "th b st that th cl light. Th oph rs open again t union of the College of Agri culture, ountry offers," as can b s en in ati onal hampion outh rn :lli­ Forestry and H om E conomics th Michigan or Brown teams. Yet fornia, and move on to pow rhou e Alumni As ociation will b held th Gophers will not b a younger ebraska, th Bi g Eight on[ r­ October 12 in conjunction with than usual t am, but about av rag enc favorite, th e n xt \ ek. the finn sota-Illinois H om com­ in ag comparison with th oth r Th se then ar som of "th ing game. block of 100 tick ts Big Ten teams. facts" a ording to vVa rmath, h ad­ has been l' serv d for th gam , Despit th fact that th Gophers ing into his 15th ea on at Minn - and there will be a post-game cof­ do not have a q uarterback who has sota. Pra tice op n on p lem- fe hour. Tick ts for the v nt are proven himself, and " e m hurting" b r 29 for th eason, th arliesL $6.50 p r per on, or $13.00 per fo r running back in th e t am start th Bi g T n ha allow d Lo couple. TIle tickets can be PUT­ nuel us, W armath is not p si­ clat . chased by contacting the Agricul­ misti c. Th coach exp cts a "good Th Gophers ha e a olid founda­ ture, Forestry and Home E co­ L am that "'ri ll offer good comp ti­ tion of 25 returning lettermen and nomics Alumni As ociation, 205 tion t any oth r it meet '." But he a good crop of promising opho- offman Union, Uni v rsity of 1in­ cannot at thi tim predict win . 11101' s to build on. nd all that an nesota, Minneapoli s 55455, tel ­ Returning v trans Bob t in he said at this prc-s ason Lim phon .373-2466. and D el J ss n at def nsive nds, "we'r hop flit" 14 ALUMNI EWS GOPHER FOOTBALL OUTLOOK 1968

By 1IKE Lyo i speciaJl concern d ov r the 10 of thi exceptional tal nt. T HE niversit of linn ota ha not, on n 0 Big D spite th ab ence of the e blu -chipp r , ~linne­ T n football title in a row since the da s of Bruce ota ha the l1ucl us of what hould b a top-notch Big mith and the "Gold n Gopher" back in 1940-41. Ten squad. It has both exp rienc and ome pr - Hnne ota' 196 gridiron dition hopes to duplicat cociou young ter with plenty of prorni . The e 'peri- this feat by at I ast equalling last y ar's ti for the nce com in the form of 2.5 letterm n, including 16 champion hip. Th Goph f ' also ha th ir eye on player who wer ith r re ular or alternate la t something 1 - the Ro e Bowl. year. mong them ar uch tandout a defen i e end oach lurra \ armath and his 1967 quad mad Bob tein, who \Va named to s vera1 ll- merican no ret of th ir di appointment at being d nied th trip to Pa adena last winter. Indiana' " inderella" Iloo ier got th nod in tead despite a 33-7 10 s at the hand of hnne ota. On the other hand John Pont' t am did COr a i tor 0 I' the third co-champion, Purdu , a team which pumm led the Gopher 41-12. Th Boil J m k r w I' in ligible to make th trip sin e the had repr ented the Big Ten th pr viou ear. ~Iinn ota' la t Ro Bowl entr \ a the 1961 t am which def at d L 21-3. If th ,opher ntertain high hop ,they also face obsta Ie, , hich ar quall), impre iv. t the lea t of th m i. th ch dul . It i tailor-mad to plea e the fans but i. 1 than endearing to oach 'Varmath and his staff. t home, the opher will face no fewer than thr e of th t am \ hich ar xp ct d to rank in the top ten nationall - outh rn alifornia ( ept m­ h r 21), 1 bra ka ( ptemb r 2 ) and Purdu ( 0- emb r 9). \ ake For t, Illinoi and Iowa al 0 , ill app a1' in lemorial tadium. ~1ichigan tat, ~Ii hi­ Veteran Ron Kamzelski, a 240·pound, gan, Indiana and 'Vi consin will be m t on ho tile 20-year-old senior, will start at defen­ fi Id . The pattan, \ 01" rin sand Hoo i r ar all sive left tackle. xpected t be title contender. IlIinoi , Iowa and \Yi - on in ar rat d a impro d and th Badger arc alwa tough to b at at ~Iadi on. Wake For t \ ill b me ting linn sota for th fir t tim . oph r raduation los s wer not t 0 reat num ri­ all with onl nine play r mi in from tho who a., a on sid rable amount of action a year ago. Elghte n I tt rnlen w r altog th r, but nine f them xp ri n ecllittl comp tition. nfortunat 1)' the qualit of til departed nin eteran ' \Va top-draw r. one are su h off n i talwart a tight nd har! y ancler, ta kle John \Villiams \Vh won a pot on Tim ~l agaz in e' 11 - m ri an quad, quarterba k urt Wi! n, t, i e named UPI ~1id\\l t ba k-of-th - week Ia t fall , and Ranker Hubi Bryant., Reau1::> lar punt r Da Baldridg, \Vh boot d an -yard r against tah, aloha c1 parted. D f 11 iv I , th oph rs \V r hit b th los of ta kl · ~1 Kinl v Boston, middl guard Ed Duren, d f n iv halfba k 1967 All-American Bob Stein, a 20- Tom Sakal ancl saf t like ondo. \\ illiam B ton year,old senior at 218 pounds, will nd akal \ on fir t-t 'am II -Big T 11 h nor. " armath man the defensive left end position. EPTE 1BER, 196 15 appar nt at tight nd thi sea on, nd Bro\ nand Bill hri ti on at guard, Phil Hag n and Ray teph ' n at quart rback and ~lauric Fort who an pIa ith r tailback or fullback. hri ti on mi d th '67 ea on b cau e of a knee injury. In addition, a coupl f play rs who did not I tt r on la t s a on' quad app ar r ad to vie for tarling off nsi positions. Ted Burk , an off n iv nd in '67, "as witched to ent r in pring pra tic and has om on strong. Jim' robel wa the o. 1 I ft tackl all clw'ing pring drills. D f nSively, v n r gulars return - Bob t in and Del J s n at end, Ron Kannel ki at tackl , apt. 0 I J nk , Wayn King and Dav ixon at linebacker and D nni Hal at I ft half. ixon i something of a qu tion mark b caus of a kne injury suffer d in th spring am . Oth r candidates for starting spots are Bill Laak 0 and Jim Pahula at middl guard, Dennis om 11 , John Captain Noel Jenke, a 210-pound, 21- Darkem aId and Pahula at lin backer. orn 11 wa th yeor-old senior, plays the "monster" regular fullback in 1966 but miss d all of last ea on linebacker or "strong-side" position_ beau. of a kn injury \ hi h h aggra at d in spring pra ·tic . If . ound, he could b a Hr t-rat lin - ba k r in the opinion of opher each . on-lett ring return es who Rgur promin ntly in battle for regular d f n iv po ition ar J £f ygren a candidate for aka!' cant right half spot, Walt Pribyl, anoth I'd f n i back and p ed D ug Roalstad at saf ty. ' ophomore help is mo t abundant \Vh re it i n d d - at tackl . Th top off nsi candidates al that po ition are Joh n Harris (6-6, 260 pounds), from Etobicoke, OntariO; Al in Haw s (6-5, 235) , II mphi , T nnes ee; John Thomp on (6-2, 230) , HickOlY, orlh arolina. Def n iv tack I pro p t ar Iik old- b rg (6-3, 220) , Tul a, Oklahoma; Jan Is on (6-3, 235), linn apolis (\ a hburn) · t Thompson (6-3, 215) , t. Louis Park; ick Tymo z \ icz (6-4, 240), t. ath rine's, Ontario. Goldberg" as the onl opho­ mol' to br ak into the r gular lin up during spring drill . Oth r promising neWCOl11 rs ar Terry ddison (6-2, Veteran defensive right end De l Jessen is a 21-year-old, 210-pound senior_ 1 0), I mph is, Tenn s , at fl anker; ''''alt B ws r (6-1, 165), T \Vport ws, Virginia, quart rback; Ri h rawford (6-1, 210) , Iari ttn, Georgia, lin - teams a a tackl Ez 11 Jon , lh backer and miclcll guard; Barr Ia y r (6-2, 200) , I' ipi nt of 'onsid rabl pre-s as on 11- merican Fargo, orth Dakota, fullba k; Fran Paqu tt (6-1, mention, and Jim Cart r, who appear h ad d for a 1 5), uperior, ' i consin, offen ive nd; H nr lam-bang s ason at fullba k. art r \ as th 1 ading Ta ch (6-1, 190), lin ba ker; Jeff ' right (6-0, 17 ), Goph r groundgain r last y ar with ant of 519 yards Edina, cI fen ive halfba k; Bill teinbau r (6-3, 220), c1espit not playing in on game_ Edina, d fensiv nd; Bob Eastlund (6-2, 215), I anti, Fifteen of th monogram-winn rs return on off ns . ent r. Th include 1967 regulars hip Litt n at plit nd, The Gopher app ar to be b st £i d on offen al­ Jon s at tackl , Dick End rl and Tom Fink at guard, thouah and 1'S an 1 William will b p ciall hard Steve Lund n at ~ nteJ' , org ~ Kcmp and John to r pIa and Wi! on rose to great h ight in rtain vVintermut who shar d th starting duti s at I ft half, ital gam s. Wilson's r pIa m nt to a larg xt nt Rank r 1ik urtis \ ho alt mat c1 v ry oth r pIa, will b the k y to th a on. H ag n \ a th o. 1 man with Bryant, and art r at rull. at lhat spot through ut pring pra tic and app ar d Other returning off nsiv 1 tt I'm n are L on con id rably improv d. ording to , annath, how- Trawick, a d fen i end last fall but Sander' heir n, th , po ition i still op n. teph ns, rat d th b st 16 L MNI NEV long pa . er on th quad, is ry much in th running. Hag n ompl t d 27 of 56 pas Ia t fall for a .4 2 P rc ntage and two tou ·hdown. t phen conn ted on 10 of 36 for a .27 averag and no touchdowns. Bow r, who i an xtr m Iy quick and cl er nmner, aL 0 could hlp. If th right quart rback can b found, the attack could b xplosiv . art r, at fullback, "'rill ha e f w if any p er in th Bi T n. H how d om de a tating running la t spring. ~la r, p S ibly th most promi - ing memb r of th ophomore rop, will pu hart r hard unl s , armath d cid to hift lay r to tail­ back, a mo ,hicb" ould gi him h 0 puni hing p wer runn r in th am backfi Id. Th I ft half pot already has thre prov n ball carri r in Kemp, Wint rmut and Fort . Flank r should b no pr blem with both urtis and ddison on hand and \Vint r­ mut operatina a a wing man. Th onl fear at pr s nt is th ondition of ddi on' kn ,hich h injur d in th pring gam . Both Hagen and t phens hay pa 'sinO' abilit, . The Senior offensive right tackle Ezell Jones has been receiving considerable pre· pr bi m last ar, a con i tency. lIag n wa on­ season All American mention. Twenty­ siderabl more ff ti , howe er, and did lead the ane.year·old Jones stands 6' 4" at 243 opher to vic tori 0 er tah and Illinoi. The pounds. favorit targ t of both quarterback ,vill b Litten \\ ho I ad th tcam in ardag on pa rec ption la t year, ith 296 and touchdo' n with four. ther good Hal i a £i.xture at d fen ive I ft half but could be targ tare urti , ddison and Trawick \ ho caught shifted to af ty if needed. uch a "itch doe n't . , n pa e for 62 ard in a 10 ing cau e in the pring appear likel, in'ce Roal tad ba th peed and tou h­ ne to do a good job at afety. The other halfback pot will b conte t d b, gren and WriO'ht. Wri ht i an out tanding pro pect but must avoid th injury jinx which ha plagu d him inc h moIled at ~linn e ota. Th "expert " are pickin the Goph r to fini h any­ wher from fir t to fifth, but the con en u eem to be third. Both Purdu and Indiana will make o'on bids to d fend their hare of the Big Ten crown. The ar Boilermaker return their deva tatinO' backfield of xp rience. halfback L ro Ke 'e ,po ibly th be t player .in th probabl cannot hop to ountry, quarterback like Phipp and fullback P IT)' aI" unit whi h gay up Williams. Purdu al 0 is O'ettin plenty of vote a the b t team in th nation. Indiana rna hav difficulty r taining th ahno t up r-human Ul: e to win whi h th Hoo i r e"hibit d la t fall. On thing i certain. Th )' \\'on t n ak up on unron thi tim . hi tat i rat d the top darkhor c candidat \\ith a 'trong nuel II of return and an ut tanding ophom l' crop. It hedule ould b a ood om n for th Bu k , too, with both :\Iinn ota and In­ diana ab nt. Ii higan ha pI nt, of tal nt, including two of th nation' b t ba k in quarterback Denni Brown and halfback Ron Jolm on. }.lichigan tat alo app ax to b haded ba k toward the t p of th heap , ft r la t year' eli app inting lump. It " 'ould appear that th ventual cham! i n r co- hamp ' will com from thi group fix. If th opher- avoid k y injurie , find th right quarterba k and uitable r pIa ement in th off n ive and d f n iy lin and th defen h ' ondar I it ould b 1941 all o\' r again. "hat' mor untr . it could b 1961 again, too. EPTE lBER, 196 17 Join The 1969 Scandinavia­ Russian Tour JULY 14 to AUGUST 4 AN E XCITING Thomes to view the Houses of Parlia­ July 21 . . . Oslo/Copenhagen ment and Big Ben . .. in the after­ The morning sightseeing includes the ITINERA R Y .. . noon a special visit to the Winston City Hall, Frogner Park with its works Churchill apartment and War Rooms of Vigeland . . . take an afternoon underneath Whitehall " evening the­ flight to Copenhagen, gay capitol of atre tickets. Denmark ... make an evening visit July 17 .. london/Bergen to fabulous Tivoli ... Imperial Hotel. July 14 . . . Twin Cities/New York After a leisurely morning in london, a July 22 .. . Copenhagen Meet your fellow alumni ,at the Im ­ flight to Bergen, capital of Western Sightseeing of the city and its harbor perial Lounge of Northwest Airlines. Norway . . . remainder of day at with the Little Mermaid, the Old Fish Tour personnel will be there to assist leisure ... Bristol Hotel. Market, Amalienborg Palace ... an in last minute details and check in July 18 . .. Bergen/Stalheim excursion to North Sealand, motoring your baggage to London . Board your Drive along the Sorfjord through the along the Danish Riviera to Elsinore . . . Northwest flight to New York ... at Tokagjelet Gorge to Norheimsund ... visit Kronborg Palace before returning Kennedy International change planes continue along the lovely Hardanger­ to Copenhagen for dinner at " 7 Small to Trans World Airlines transAtlantic fjord, through exciting mountain passes Homes,lI jet . . dinner on board overnight and past roaring waterfalls to Stal· July 23 .. . Copenhagen flight. heim ... Stalheim Tourist Hotel. A full free day to relax and explore July 15 ... Enroute/london July 19 ... Stalheim/lake Tyin this charming city ... visi t Den Per­ Arrive London airport ofter break­ Cruise the majestic Sognefjord, the monte, an exciting exhibiti on of arts, fast ... a London tour representative longest and deepest in th e world crafts, weaving and Danish Modern will meet you . .. tronsfer to the afte r lunch visit a fascinating 12th cen­ furniture . .. Stroget, a pedestrian Tavistock Hotel; remainder of morning tury Stave Church and move across the street which storts at th e Town Hall , rest and relax . .. afternoon sight­ barren reindeer mountains to Lake filled with fascinating shops. seeing of Britain's impressive capital Tyin ... Tyin Mountain Hotel. July 24 . . . Copenhagen/Stockholm includes SI. Paul's Cathedral, the Tower July 20 .. . lake Tyin/Oslo Board the flight to Stockholm, beautiful of London, motoring to Trafalgar Descend the lofty mountains and con­ capital of Sweden . . . sightseeing Square, Piccadilly Circus and past Buck­ tinue to Fagernes . .. lunch at a 260- includes the splendid City Hall and ingham Palace. year-old form house and watch folk Riddarholm Church ... Malmen Hotel. July 16 . .. london dancing . .. motor through the beauti­ July 25 ... Stockholm Morning sightseeing of Royal London ful Begna Valley via the Sollihogda Go by motorboat along the winding includes the Changing of the Guard, Pass to Oslo, picturesque capita l of canals of the city and harbor Westminster Abby, motoring along the Norway .. . Hotel Viking. lunch at Skansen, th e intriguing Ope n 18 LUM I EW Air Museum with its thea tres a nd falk­ estate of Leo To lstoi, ma intained a s it see, specifically on July 15, 16, 23, dancing ... on a fternoon at leisure was in his d a y, a nd the modern Mos­ 25, 27 and August 4. to perhaps visit the Vasa Museum, cow Sta te University . watch the TRAVEl: By deluxe chartered motar­ stroll along the winding streets of O ld evening Ch a nging of the Guard in coach, local steamers and Tourist Town with its curious little shops, or Red Square. closs air. s~e the marvelous display of Milles August 1 . . . Moscow SIGHTSEEING & SPECIAL FEATURES : All sculpture. Morning sightseeing includes Red sightseeing and special tours as July 26 . . . Stockholm/Helsi nki Squa re, the center of Moscow's political specified in the itinerary with private On to Helsinki, capitol of Finland ... life, with the monument of Lenin, SI. English-spea king guides, includes all tour the open air markets, the ha rbor, Basil's Cathedral, the Historical Museum entrance fees. House of Parlia ment, the O lympic a nd the G .U.M. Department Store. TRANSFERS & LUGGAGE: All transfers Stadium and drive through the modern August 2 ... Moscow/Berlin of group a nd bagga ge from airports, suburbs .. . you ma y w o nt to try a A leisure morning in Moscow until fly. piers, ro il sta ti ons to a nd from sauna ... Merihotelli. ing to Berlin, divided city of the hotels; including porterage a nd han­ July 27 ... Helsinki West ... visit the Bra ndenburg Ga te, dling of one o verage size suitca se, See the works of leading Finnish a rchi­ O lympic Stadium, the Wa ll, Kaiser Wil­ and a fli g ht bo g which will be tects and then the O pen Air Museum helm Memoria l ... Schweizerhof Hotel. furnished . at Seurassari and the old peasa nt August 3 . . . Berlin TIPS & TAXES : All tips a nd ta xes on homes ... o n afternoon of leisure for Visit Ea st Berlin with its fa mous Unter services furnished, includ ing tha t to shopping and in d ependent a ctivities. den Lin d en, the Sta te O pera House, guides a nd service personnel. Air­ July 28 . . . Helsinki/Leningrad Soviet Wa r Memoria l . .. return to port ta xes are a lso included. Relax in the morning before flying to West Berlin for relaxation, shopping PRE-TRIP SERVICE: Bulletins on obta in­ Leningrad, formerly St. Petersburg, the a long the Kurfurstendamm or a visit to ing passport, immuniza tions, po ck­ USSR's most beautiful city ... Intourist the world-fa mous Zoo. ing, etc. w ill be sent on receipt of (pending). August 4 ... Be rlin/ Minneapolis deposit. Before departure all instruc­ July 29 ... Len ingrad To the airport, and back to Minne­ tions on meeting the group a nd your Tour the Admiralty, River Neva Em­ apolis. tour hosts will be forwarded a long bankment and the busy two miles of with final documents including mail­ Nevsky Prospect, the city's main ave­ ing a ddresses for friends and rela­ nue with many specialty shops, arcades tives. and imposing buildings ... visit the ESPECIALLY NOT INCLUDED : Passport fees; tips world-renowned Hermitage, former aboard ships; lunches a nd/ or din­ Winter Palace, now housing priceless FOR YOU ners referred to as " independent"; collections of art and other treasures. gifts; bath services in some hotels; July 30 ... leningrad/ Moscow THE PRICE: $1095 (from Twin Cities); tips for individual personal services; Sightsee and shop in the morning of a $1070 (from Chicago); $1004 (from personal items such as laundry, city which offers striking contrast - the New York). phone calls and beverages not in­ wide sweep of the River Neva and the AIR TRANSPORTATION: Trans-Atlantic cluded with the meal. delicate tracery of Moscow's bridges travel by TWA Jet (economy class). REGISTRATION: Membership on the tour lend incomparable charm .. Intourist HOTElS: Specially selected first class is limited. You are urged to register (pending). hotels, as listed in boldface in the early to guarantee a place. A $100 J uly 31 .. Moscow itinerary, in twin bedded rooms with deposit per person is required at the See the Bolshoi and the Kremlin ... bath and/ or shower. time of registration which is applied drive along Gorky Street, Moscow's MEALS: Continental breakfast, lunch­ to the price of your trip. Checks main thoroughfare, with its theatres, eons and dinners are included, ex­ should be made payable to " Uni· museums, modern dwellings, cafes and cept luncheons on free days in major versity of Minnesota Alumni-Tour shops . . . the statues of Pushkin, centers to permit greater freedom Scandinavia-Russia 1969," and re­ Dorogurki and Gorky . . . visit the for tour participants to shop, sight- turned with the blank below.

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Reservations limite d . Ra tes ba sed on double occupa ncy. EPTEMBER, 196 19 T HIS big, 7 foot by 11 foot, e lectrical gadget may save the long years spent THIS IS A UNIVERSITY in underground mine planning. With a face covered by 1500 telephone jacks, the instrument simulates a plan or top view of an underground tabular ore A machine that is an d eposit. It's name - the Mine Stress and Convergence Analog computer. underground mine .. " A whole range of possibilities, in planning the layout and sequence of an underground mine, which ordinarily would take years of actual excavation work, can now be explored in a few minutes through simulation with the mine stress and convergence analog," Professor Neville Cook of South Africa (at center in the photo), a recent guest lecturer at the University, explained in de monstrating the analog. The first prototype of the analog, built by Cook at the Mining Research laboratory of the South African Cham­ ber of Mines, is now in use to plan many major gold mines in South Africa. A more sophisticated model was built under the direction of Associate Professor David lacabanne of the School of Mineral and Metallurgical En ­ gineering at the University. He is seen removing jacks at right in the photo. This model - still being modified and improved - is the only one of its kind presently in the Un ited States. Each telephone jack on the analog's face represents an underground area or block of earth . When a jack is pulled out, the operator has " mined out" or removed all of the earth from that area. " Changes in current and voltage which take place in the instrument simulate the changes in underground stress and convergence of openings," Professor Charles Fairhurst, director of various rock mechanics research pro­ grams and acting head of the School of Mineral and Metallurgical Engineering, expla ined. He is pictured at the far left. In this way, experience with a cer­ tain type of mining problem is gained before mining begins. Alternative an­ swers to the various mining approaches an e ngineer might be planning are provided in advance, causing him to examine hi s reasons for any given approach. Th e basic design problem in under­ ground evacuation - how to extract as much ore a s possible, yet leave enough ore body to preve nt collapse before mining can be completed - is si mpli­ fied, if not pre-solved, with this com­ pute r method. As these computer results are compared with underground obser­ vations, the ana log will become more useful in actually predicting and plan­ ning what will ha ppen in mining. LU iN! EW 20 THE ALUMNI BOOKSHELF Featuring reviews of books written by, about and of interest to Minnesota alumni. I _

SIX AMERICAN NOVELISTS OF THE that of France, Germany, England or even Russia is NINETEENTH CENTURY. Edited by one thing, but to elevate these differences to the Richard Foster. Mi nneapolis: Uni­ extent that they assume metaphysical significance, as versity of Minnesota Press, 1968. Foster does, is quite another. At any rate, the essays $6.50. Richard Foster is a professor in this book do not bear out Foster's claims for 19th in the University of Minnesota's century American literature - or, for that matter, anv generalization about it. ' English Department. Rather, this volume offers the reader six substantial The six essays which comprise this volume were essays on six outstanding American ,,,'Titers. The essays first published as part of the excellent series "Univer­ vary in style, focus, and in what each critic feels are sity of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers." the salient features of each novelist for the purpose Each of the essays, prepared by an outstanding lit­ of concise introductory discussion. Six American Nov­ erary critic, was desi!!Ded to prOvide a concise intro­ elists is, in the last analysis, a book in which the sum duction to one particular major writer. of the parts is greater than the whole.-M.P. The novelists discussed in thi volume, and the contributing authors, are James Fenimore Cooper by Robert E. Spiller, Nathanial Hawthorne by Hyatt H. RIK K OF THE RENDAL CLAN. By 'Waggoner, Herman l-.lelville by Leon Howard, Mark Twain by Lewis Leary, William Dean Howells by Borghild Dah l. New Yo rk: E. P. Dutton \Villiam Gibson, and Henry James by Leon Edel. & Company, 1958. $3.95. All of the essays follow a similar form, providing Borghild Dahl is the daughter of Norwegian parents neces ary biographical material on each novelist along who settled in ~1innesota. She grew up in Minneap­ \vith critical discussion of his work. In this respect, olis, and follOWing graduation from the University, all are of conSistently high quality. If forced to single obtained her l\Iaster's dearee from New York's Colum­ out one among them for special note, this reviewer, bia University. She is the first woman to be granted at least, would select Professor \Vaggoner's essay on a fellowship to Norway from the American-Scandi­ Ha\vthorne. navian Foundation; the nrst foreign-born woman to Waggoner goes beyond the demands of "introduc­ be made a Norsk Akademiker at the University of tion" and probes to a greater degree into his material, Oslo. l-.1i s Dahl has also received the coveted medal presenting a provocative - if brief - synthesis of the of St. Olaf from the King of Norway. basic themes in Hawthorne's fiction. Plagued by poor eyesight for years, she became A problem \vith the volume results when the es ays blind many 'ears ago. Yet she continues to write, within it are not viewed indi idually, but as parts in and has added Rikk of the Rendal Clan to her delight­ a Single unit. The essays are arranged in a roughly ful offering in children's book . chronological fashion, beainning with Cooper and Rikk is a troll, sent out on his twelfth birthday concluding with James, suggesting that the volume into the world for the first time. He must reach the was conceived to be - however loosely - a history of crossroads and come back before . The de­ the American novel in the 19th century. This impres­ lightful humor of Mi s Dahl combines well with Ib sion is given some substance in Profe sor Foster's OhIs on's warm-witty illustration to show that Rikk's introduction, which characterizes American literature biggest problem is staying out of trouble. of the 19th century as "a literature of innovative Resplendent in bright green trousers and golden­ vision . . . unique in its time." The reason for this, brown leggings made of "soft wisps of lamb's wool Foster argues, is that the United States was separated purpo ely left for the trolls" and a bright red peaked from the old culture of Europe and nourished by the cap, this tailed fellow (Did you know that trolls had expansiveness of American SOciety and continent. The tails?) almost forgets that trolls mu t not be touched only equivalent national literature, Fo ter believes, by a sunbeam during his adventures. was that of Russia. A friendly cricket - a good luck omen for trolls­ To recognize that American nction is different from how him the \Yay to the road, cautionincr him to SEPTEMBER, 1968 21 keep a safe distance so as not to step on him. Then men, Noble believes, not only deny the truth of the Rikk meets a frog and receives a jumping lesson. American promise, but its validity as well. Freed A sparrow tells him that climbing trees "is very from the burden of remaining American innocents, simple." But Rikk quickly finds out differently. they have been able to move toward an affirmation Then there is his escapade with the fox who is in of their identity with the "eternal adam" - unre­ search of a toothsome morsel for his wife'sl birthday deemed man - and with a larger human community. dinner. Rikk outwits him - barely - with the special Despite this, Noble feels, most American intellec­ gray cloak his Spinster Great-aunt Aasve had given tuals up to the present have chosen to cling to their him. belief in the possibility of salvation from history. Finally, R,ikk meets a friendly elkhound, and must consider breaking one of the stl'ictest laws of the But in tlle '11ysterical affirmation" of James Bald­ troll clan - that trolls are never permitted to see hu­ win and Norman Mailer he sees "intimations of man beings. A little boy's life depends on his decision. crumbling and disintegration in the wall of faith"; Rill is not only a troll, he is all children who have and in the flat denial of this faith by Saul Bellow he ventured into parts of the world for the mst time. finds reason for hope that Americans are finally escap­ And Miss Dahl tells his story with an insight knOwing ing their bondage to an ideology of national salvation. of the children's world of wonder and adventure. Noble's study of the idea of innocence in the Amer­ Rikk of the Rendal Clan is not only a children's ican novel is also a critique of the ethical values which book; it is one of those children's books which quickly it assumes. The author, like the "nay-sayers" he finds becomes an adult book. Not only is the story charming in America's literary past, affirms that man's possi­ and provocative for the reader's own childhood mem­ bilities can be realized only through an identification ories; its illustration is fasCinatingly beautiful. As \'lith the larger human community. Unlike James always, to day's finest illustration is found in children's Gould Cozzens who, Noble says, denies the possi­ literature. bility of attaining th e American dream only to settle If you have been follOwing the works of Tolkien, into a grim stoicism, Noble affirms a larger human this book is another must for you - and your children. dream against which to measure our social reality: "Our novelists have convinced me that this tension is inevitable because the human cOIrJmunity must always THE ETERNAL ADAM AND THE have roots in the past even as it must have a vision of NEW WORLD GARDEN: THE CEN­ the future." It is from such tension, Noble feels, that TRAL MYTH IN THE AMERICAN human creativity becomes pOSSible. NOVEL SINCE 1830. By David W. In this book, the author is striking out in new direc­ Noble. New York: Braziller, 1968. tions from the scholarly tradition established by critics $5.95. Mr. Noble is a professor in the such as Leslie Fiedler, Henry Nash Smith, Lionel University of Minnesota's History Trilling and - especially- R.W.B. Lewis, which pre­ pared the ground work for Noble's particular syn­ Department. thesis. David Noble's study of the American novel repre­ As benefits an innovative work such as this one, sents the second volume of a proposed trilogy on Noble pays little regard to the usual conventions of American thought since 1830. In the first, Historians literary scholarship. The book is free of footnotes, Against History, Professor Noble argues that Amer­ copious cross references and bibliography. The debts ican historians have been the most important spokes­ he has, he discharges in his generous acknowledg­ men for a nationalistic utopianism which proposed ments. that Americans had escaped the vicissitudes of Euro­ pean history to live according to the laws of nature­ Thus, the work is more a provocative, extended, an edenic life in the "new world garden." informal essay than a formal work of scholarship. Because Americans so clearly defined the meaning Herein, however, lie the major difficulties of the of their historical experience as one in which men of book. Noble's concern is with demonstrating the the Old World undel'Went a rebirth and a redemption history of a Single theme, which leads 11in1 all too from historical communities, Noble feels American often to a repetitive quality in each chapter, skirting novelists were forced to become public philosophers the many variations on the central theme articulated and theologians, testing this utopian promise against by an individual author. He is less guilty of this fault when treating those novelists witll whom he the reality of the American experience. Noble finds this tension in five generations of Amer­ sympathizes - Faulkner's painful escape from aliena­ tion, for example - and is less effective than he might ican writers from James Fenimore Cooper to Saul be with others, such as Hemingway. Bellow. In each generation the author pOints to "nay­ sayers" - Cooper, Melville, Hawthorne, James and, These faults, perhaps, are an expected liability in most recently, Bellow - who see in this American faith a study of this nature, which is a stimulating and "an impossible enterprise which twists the , valuable view of American literature, intellectual his­ blights the mind and results in social sterility." These tory and - ultimately - cultural identity.-M.P. 22 ALUMNI NEWS CANOEING WITH THE CREE. By Eric This is not only an adventure story, it is also a~ Sevareid '34BAJourn. St. Paul: interesting reading of the first effort by an al~mDl who has become an outstanding commentator-Jour­ Minnesota Historical Society, Reprint nalist of today's world. The book is young - but is Edition, 1968. $4.50. one which shows the incisive style and fineness of In his author's note to the Reprint Edition, Sev­ reporting that was to mark Eric. Sevareid's su~ess. areid says: "This brief book was written when I was This writing is considered an lIDportant contrtb.u­ eighteen years old. It is about a canoe voyage of more tion by the Minnesota Historical Society to the his­ than two thousand miles. I made this trip with a re­ torical record of the Canadian north; Sevareid wrote markable companion two or three years older than 1. clear word pictures of the water routes to Hudson Without him the idea for the expedition would never Bay and fine prose portraits of traders, Indians and have been conceived; and without him, in the terrible others encountered along the way. Photographs and last days of the adventure, I would not have survived. maps complement the edition. "This story is republished now, many years after And finally, for those of you who know and enjoy the event, as a simple and, I hope, honest account of the north's canoe country, or any for that matter, the the glory and the misery that a teenager can ex­ story is worth your memories - and your comparisons perience if he tries hard enough. Our journey was an as to how you might have done it. example of what very young men can do - once in This reviewer's feeling is firm: to read it is almost their lives - but never again." wanting to try it yourself. - rnla The book is truly the "glory and misery" of two young men - if you are out to read an adventure story. For it is the story of how Sevareid and his THE WALL AND THE GARDEN: companion paddled an 18-foot canoe, the Sans Sauci SELECTED MASSACHUSETTS ELEC­ ("without care"), from Minneapolis to Hudson Bay. TION SERMONS 1670-1775. Edited The voyage covered 2,250 miles, reqUired 60 portages by A. W. Plumstead. Minneapolis: and lasted nearly four months. Near its finish the University of Minnesota Press, 1968. young men raced the weather - to beat the fall freeze­ $8.50. Mr. Plumstead is an associate up and a possible stranding in the north. professor of English at the University Initially the journey was more one of mettle, a of Minnesota. they met and became acquainted with many colorful, Protestanti m, espeCially Calvinistic protcstantism, helpful people as they passed through the cities and has had a decisive inlpact on the formation of Anglo­ towns of Minnesota, and North and South Dakota American culture - its social structure, politic . art along their route. Even Canada had not been too for­ and its literature. One of the most Significant, but least bidding when they reached Winnipeg. After leaving considered. literary genres generated by this cultural this northern city and its vital Canoe Club - whose backe-round is the ermon. members warned and intimidated the travelers that The sermon, of course, is not unique to Anglo-Ameri­ thev would never make their destination, York Fac­ can culture, and has a history which e:dends to the mid­ tory, Hudson Bay - the adventure turns into a dle ages; but it was primarily in England and in the hair-raising tale. Now their stick-to-it-ivene is not United States that the literary possibilities of the form enough - they must reach for courage, skill and a were most fully realized. ~lost famous in this respect, feeling for their destination. And especially the neces­ of course, are the magniflcant sermons of the 17th cen­ sity to work together: tury English poet John Donne. "There were no portage to be found and we waded With this anthology of Massachusetts election ser­ and dragged the canoe until we could stand the cold mons, Professor Plumstead has brought to light an im­ water no longer. Then we crawled into the trees half­ portant aspect of America's literary past. The election way up the dill, out of the frosty wind which drove day sermon was an annual, formal address presented the rain into our faces. There we ate a can of cold by an outstanding minister to the newly assembled beans, shivering and crouching to escape the wind. colonial legislature. It was the spiritual analogue of We wore the beaten looks of despair. Some sort of our secular State of the Union Address. The 1assa­ pride prevented us from begging each other's for­ chusetts Election day sermons formed a tradition which giveness. A grip of the hand was all that was needed, began in 1634 and continued for the next 250 years. but somehow it did not occur." For this reason, if for no other, these sermons would The voyage could have ended in disaster, partic­ be of considerable value. In them, are valuable docu­ ularly in its final days when the boys crossed the ments for the study of American colonial history. closing waterways through an almost unnavigable Important as this consideration is, however, it was water and wilderness islands, closed over by bad not the only - or even primary - consideration which weather. But because Sevareid writes \ ith the exu­ entered into Plumstead's election of sermons for this berance and optimism of the young, combin d with a anthology. Equally important was their value as litera­ new knowledge of self gained from his journey, it is ture. As he notes in the introduction, the material was not until you finish the book that you realize the chosen on the basis of "literary excellence and ideas incredibility of that trip. and points of style relevant to later de elopments in SEPTE~1BER, 1968 23 American literature and history." These changes of His drive, enthusiasm and particular human qual­ style and theme, Professor Plumstead notes, offer a ities maTked him for amazing success, and association clear vantage point to view the changes and continui­ Witll such scientists as Robeli Oppenheimer, Enrico ties in colonial intellectual history. Fermi, Niels Bohr and other greats. The sermons Professor Plumstead has selected fall Lawrence lead a whole new generation of scien­ into two broad categories. The first, whiJh includes tists, and Herbert Childs gives the intriguing and five sermons presented between 1670 and 1730, out­ detailed story of how his leadership happened. His lines the theological and social implications o£ the biography spans 535 pages and is worth reading Puritan ethos which Perry Miller called "the errand every hard-gotten detail of the life of a man "who into the wilderness." The second group illustrates the had accomplished so much when young, and who transition of colonial culture from its essentially Cal­ had so much faith in the capabilities of the young." vinistic outlook to that of the enlightenment. Per­ Lawrence was a heady man - from reading his hflPS the outstanding sermon in the collection is that story you are sure his wife, Molly. could attest to given by Cotton Mather in 1689. Mather's eloquence that, considering their courtship. But perhaps the is heightened by the fact that his sermon followed best words spoken on his life, were uttered at his shortly upon the "glorious revolution" which deposed death, by Berkeley'S Clark Kerr: a monarch in England and the Royal Governor, Sir "Manlike creatures have lived on this planet for Edward Andros, in Massachusetts. at least a million years. Throughout these million years they have constantly groped to understand more A difficulty these sermons can pI'esent as literature about and to control better the world about them. for the general reader is the erudition they demand. A few of them have shot some ray of light into the The election sermons printed here are rigid in form great unknown darkness of ignorance and illuminated and logic. Each begins with "explication" of some Bib­ a new area for all future generations. One of the lical text, often including discussion of controversial strongest of these beams of light was created by pOints of translation from the Hebrew or Greek. From Ernest Lawrence, and men forever after will see far­ explication, they proceed to "doctTine" - the lesson ther and understand more because of it. Each of us of the text. This portion can take on much variation and our children owe to Ernest Lawrence a debt and expansion. From this general moral, the minister beyond price. For, by his expansion of our under­ then brings his pOint home ' to the congregation with standing, by his reduction of our ignorance, he has an analogy to the present. The sermon concludes with added a little more to the human dignity of each of some words of praise for the assembled dignitaries. us and something more to the meaning of life . . . To guide the reader, Professor Plumstead includes a And in the men and women he gathered about him - lucid general introduction and brief introductions to in their enthusiastic expeditions into the unknown, the sermons. in tlleir intriguing concepts and effective works to Though form is rigid, a highly conventional art form bend the atom to man's good-iS the continuing spirit does not mean a highly conventionalized art. Pro­ of Ernest Lawrence." fessor Plumstead correctly asserts that these sermons Lawrence's achievements in science have a ded­ "surmount the convention of time, place and cliches icated rapidity that is often difficult to realize­ with the ring of conviction, with passion as well as unless you have known someone like him. He was a control." man of honesty, courage, conviction and above-all forthrightness. To the critic and historian of ideas, Professor Plwn­ The latter quality can be seen in his days at the stead has given a valuable book of source material­ University of Minnesota, when his Master's thesis intelligently edited and presented. To the reader, pre­ was completely 'beyond the comprehension" of one pared for a challenge, he has given a volume contain­ of his professorial xaminers, and he had "a dickens ing fresh and often beautiful expression of 17th and of a time educating him enough to get his approval." 18th century religiOUS ideas. In it is an opportunity to Those alunmi who knew the Lawrence days at mscoveT the Pwitans speaking in their most eloquent Minnesota will have a comfortable time reading about voices.-M.P. them, and tllat man of science - William Francis Gray I Swan - who had so much to do with leading a young man into phYSics and away from medicine. AN AMERICAN GENIUS: THE LIFE OF When Lawrence died in 1958, President Eisen­ ERNEST ORLANDO LAWRENCE, hower said that he had in a sense, given his life for FATHER OF THE CYCLOTRON. By his country. This man - who was the founder and Herbert Childs. New York: E. P. director of Berkeley's world-famous radiation labora­ Dutton & Company, 1968. $12.95. tory, a key man in the super-secret Manhattan Project Ernest Orlando Lawrence was an American genius­ and made a major breakthrough in the study of mat­ wholly American. He was an exceptionally bright ter - had a fascinating and a productive life through youngster who tinkered with wireless outfits in small 58 years. And one that Minnesota alumni should town South Dakota. know.-mla ALUMNI NEWS 24 \ NEW MAA BOARD MEMBER MAYNARD SPEECE 43BS

If?\Iaynard p ece, WCCO radio' farm ervic dir ctor, had one wish it would probably be for an -day week. The pre ent 7-day etup barely giv him enough tim to k ep up , ith his man, activine - all of which tre ervi e to a riculture. In addition to hi l' gular schedule of .35 farm service broadca t a we k on \ C 0 , P ece i out eral night durUw the \\' ek maJ..ing per onal app aranc or meeting with farm people and farm group leader . In ju t on 6-month peliod, he poke before an e timated 30,000 per on in towns throuO'hout the . Torthwe t. p ce originated and now direct \\'CCO' co- pon or bip of tbe an­ nual ~1inne ota hampion hip Plowing \Iatche . He cam to WCCO a farm ervice director in u u t 1952, ,,;th a long background of experi­ nee in the agriculture infonnatlon field. From 19 to 19.52 h wa "ith th Office of Information of the nited tate D partm nt of Agricultur , in \ a hington, D .. Born in 1913 on a northern \Iinne ota farm near ~I ea do\\'l. nd , peec graduated from the niver it)' of i\linne ota olleO'e of Agriculture in 1943. The next) ar be \Va named county aO'ent for noka ounty \'her b promoted strong, progre sive aO'ri ultural de\'elopm nt and the 4-H lub programs. He aloe tabli hed a oil con er"anon di trict in Anoka ounty. pe ce join d the taff of the ni,'er ity in 1945 and was placed in charge of agricultural radio for the niver it\' and it tation K( 0\1. He is pa t pI' sident of th Tational ociation of T levi ion and Radio Faml Dir ctor . In a brief tel phone int rview, peece told th Alumni T w that he ha alway had "a long and abiding inter t in th niverity - particular- 1 th t. Paul campu :' omethinO' alwa: eem to happ n wben h go s to work, om lhing i botmd to h< ppen ",hile he i workinO' ,,;th th linne ota lumni ociation Board. He ha n \' I' put hi effort into < 11 . thing)' t \ h re it didn t. Among the man)' honor \Yon by p ece ha'-c b n th \ Iinneapoli dverti"ing lub-AFTR Award a B st Twin itie Fann Broadca tel', 1955 and 1957; \Iinne ota FF A HonorUl'\' tate Farm r ward; 4-H lub Key ward; tbe" cUl'in CTri ulture" Award, 196,1; 1 65 oil on 1'\'a­ lio;, en'ice ward; \Iinn ota tate o\'b an I' W r 0 ianon \ 1 ri- rvi ward, 1 ; and utstai,dincr F:.um Dir t r ward from Pfizer and ompany, 196 . pee is a direct r of th \ olunt er of m rica, a tive n the AQTi- ultural ommitt of th ~linn apoli hamber of ommerc , bonorary 111 mb r of th 1linn ota V telinarian ~1 di al Asso iution and a tiv bl man other ivic organization . n \, h i h urd n "Dail ' Farm Bull tin Board:' 'Top . Th 11 rnina,' "Earl , 110rning Farm how:' "l oon Farm R port" and 'Th wlda loming arm Hour." You can aI. o heUl' him fr m L:55 to 1:00 pm. londa through aturda ~ ' broadca tina th w ath r.

EPTE IIBER 1968 ~5 NEW MAA BOARD MEMBER MISS IRENE KREIDBERG '30BBA

L IFE in th bu in ss world began with a senior paper. Ir ne Kreidb rg chose a larg t. Paul company and went in cold, aslcing p rmis ion to analyz their filing s t m and offic pro dur . She wrot "quite a oluminous report." 1iss Donald on, her advi or, took that l' port to th regional manag r of th record divi ion of perry Rand Corporation - a s ction of trained taff r ponsible for analyzing th e record of variou companies, making r commendation and eUing record equipment - how d it to him and told him that h thought 11' n Kreidb rg b longed in his company. , he reported for work at p n y Rand on June 16- without an intervi w. T, 0 and one-half y ar lat r he was a branch office manag r. Irene tay d with p rr Rand for 34 ar, mo - ing to ni ac in 1964 to h ad I' ords manag ment and central dictation. Sbe al 0 r pre nts h r ompany through th many organization to which sh belongs. "I don't like to 'wave a r d flag as far a ,om n ar concern d. I think th y g t what th g t on th ir own merits - and many of th m don't succe d b au th y do wave a r d flag. ,oman hould b a woman, and should not comp t with, but work with m 11 ••• you must prove that ou b long in a rtail nich ," i{iss Kreidberg told th lumni ew. Thi attitude i on reason for h r ucc - thi , and a sincere d clication to what v r ta k he i at, coupled with a love of p opl . Tho e organiza tion wh hav h.'11own h r support, have known h I' U e . Ir n 's byword in xtracuuicular, ork i involv­ m nt. For thre on utiv y ars h ha b n c ntral chairman of th Minn apoli quat Imial Que ns R - vi w Lunch on. Ea h of the year the lun h on ha b n a ellout. Thi year she was not fini hI, ith quat nnia] work, h n h r c iv d a call from the hamb r of ommerce. They' l' having a 111 mb r­ ship driv and, ant d h r as on of th ir chairm n. "If you do a dedicated job, th y'll b on your h'ail," Ir ne aid." nd you'll hav ditE ult aying 'no.' I haven't 1 am d to ay 'no' and mean it." Iren is a p rp tual member of th hool f Bu i- n ss Alumni Board. "It's almost ironical," she said, "I've gon through the complete cycl of bing a board mcmb I' and have be n a con ultant for th 10 t 10 y aI's." OIlUl1l1cd 011 page 40

26 AL 1 I EV NEW MAA BOARD MEMBER J. ROSCOE FURBER '24EE

'IT ke p m out of michief," \Va J. Ro coe Furber' comment wb n queried about the long Ii t of civic activitie which have occupied his tim the e man year. H i ver enthu ia tic about working \\ith the ~I board. "I have al\Va, felt that lowed om re pon ibility to th ni er ity," he aid. Furber' affiliation with ~Iinne ota ha been a familv on - hi fath r, mother, ist r, two brother , daughter and on-in-Iaw ~ll hold niver itv d gr es. H has b 11 with Torthern tate Power inee 19:.4, and will r tire from hi work a \ ' e pr sid nt in charO' of the ~1inn eapoli ar a in January 1969. Th r '" re only five da), betw en hi going to work for N P and hi O'raduation from the niv r ity, he noted. A number of job were avail­ able t him on graduation, but he eho e N P becau he had a ~l in t. Paul and wanted to ta in the area. Both::--.i P and th 2ir1 ben fited- 5h i Ir . Furb r. "There is a r at d al of atisfaction in th Ie trical utility bu ines :' Furber said."W are pr \'iding omethinO' which i good for ~nankind. It ma1-.e ' lif comfortabl, pI a ant iner a productivity in our factOl'i and tore , and cons quentl we have a b tter lif becau we pro ide thi en rgy for u :' Furber attend d night la" at th 1\linn apoli -~Iinne ota ollege of LU\ and r eived hi d ~re with honor in 19-1 . For om vear he lec­ tur d to nior ngin ersCat th ni,' r ity campu on engin - ring ethic. In hi office hang a plaqu . carr:'inO' the d ign that can be een at the int r tion of i 011 t ~lall. Furber \Va pre id nt of th Downtown un il for two f the , car ' \Vh n th ~l al], d v lopm nt \Va in th ritical tage. 011' qu ntl. h wa l' slon ibl for much f iL progr H wa, r e ntl ] t d t a thr -y ar t rm on the Ni oIl t :--Ia11 d"j or)' 0111 111 i ion. His civi a tiviti s htl\" a] 'o in\'ol\' d the rater 1\Iinneapoli af ty oun il, of which he is th imm diate p'] t pr ident; and board m m- b r-hips with th B tt r Btl ine Bur au, 0 iat d 1ndu tri , nited Fund, In titut of rts, th quat noial and th 1\linn ota ommunitv R sear h ouneiI. Furb r i. making a Ii. t of th t rm dat for all hi ivi offic h will kno, wh n h i thr ugh. Howe\' l' we doubt if h \\ill Yer r til' from r pon ible Otl1l11Ultity invol\' 111' nt. EPTE fBER, 1968 27 NEW MAA BOARD MEMBER "T HE on ear at th ni er it of linn ota CHARLES H. whi h till tand out most cl arly in m mind i a pi of advic giv n m by Dr. Ralph a , \ ho WITHERS '49BA \ as th n h ad of th hool of Journalism. Dr. a y wa advi ing m just prior to moral xamina­ tion for umma urn Laud hon­ or . 1 \ a to b qu stion d b a pan 1 of prof or from fi elds oth r than journalism. "Dr. a told m that I \ ould b a k d om que tion that I would not know th answer too. nd hi advi e was: "When you don't know, say o. Don't try to bluff, becau th m n a king th questions know the answer and th y will know you ar bluffing. "1 took hi advic and \ as for­ tunat enough to pass the xamina­ tion. But hi ad ic has b n yen mor u ful to m in the ar inc graduation. "1 have n oth r journalists try to bluff th ir way through a ituation, when coming right out and admitting that th y didn't know th an w l' would hav be n much better." harl s , ither , ditor of th Ro h ster, 1inn ota Post-BlIlletin has h ld this ad ice in a od st ad. Hi ucc sand attitud point that way. fter graduating from D rfi Id cad my, De rB ld, lassachu- s tt h rv d with the av)' from 1945-46. H graduat d from th Roch t r, Minn sota, Juni r Colleg in 1948 and ntercd th ni er 'it of linn ' ota. With rs also arn d Phi Beta Kappa honors. ' Vithers came to the 11 wspar r fi Id naturall . Hi fath l' 0\ n cl th Roch st 'r Post-Bulletin. "Although h a tually \ ant ag r for hi son to com into th bu in ss," With rs wrot th lum- ni ws, "two of hi thr boys di 1, and w would like to b - Ii ve that b for his death h too thought it wa a good id a." H ha b n a 0 iated with the Post-Bull tin inc D cember 1949, and h a b n it ditor for lh pa t v 11 y aI's. OlltillU d o ,~ pag JO 28 LUMN1 NEW NEW MAA BOARD MEMBER VIOLET ROSACKER GRAF '33 -37

H ER lif i a part of a bi xperience. Th s word be t d cribe iolet Rosacker Graf. b , e m to be in con tant motion, though she laims that she doesn't like to think about all of the thin he i in 01 ed in. "It care me," she told the lumni ews. "1 just ke p plugging along and do it if 1 can." Vi i a woman who has integrat d her activity with her famil, life. ft r a h ctic final to a Europ an trip, the next day he \Va in a downtown :\linn apoli hotel in vol ed in an Illuminatin onvention- helping her hu band with r gi tration. "I try to join hi ' activiti a much a 1 can" h aid. "Or tr to inc1ud him in m activitie." i \Va at th niver ity durin the d pth of the depre ion. '1 \Va lucky m fath r \ asn't tanding in a breadline," h aid. be remem­ b r th Communi t acti ity on campus during tho e , ear; and that man of the la\ chool tudents \ ho were e radical then turned out to be ver con rvati e. h doesn't get as e cited about tudent unr t a many p ople do- he r m mber h r ar at linn ota and th d pre ion ume t. ~Irs. Graf ha al\Va been int re ted in the niver itv and has been perpetuall acti in her orority, lpha Gamma Delta. For h r the Gr ek and imilar organization fulfill a particular and d finite need on a Im'O'e campu . ,. om peopl n d to belong to a maIler groul~, on a large campu ju t to f I c mfortable. The Gr k fulfill thi need. H er lo yalty to the niver ity ha almo t rea hed a point where' it' a fetish," h aid. he argue bitt rl, " 'ith tho e \\'ho think the niwrsity too large, fe ling that its advantage far outweigh the p ctr of large-

th four

hairwoman for lhe Republi an party, "n t a a th' a a lot of p opl:' he

\\ n h l' d di ateel n r<7y ~. f r man onm1itl e. NEW MAA BOARD MEMBER CARL WOIE '50BEE

A nati e of linn ota, ad 'Voi was born aJ drear d in Duluth. IIe piloted a torpedo plane from an aircraft carri r in th outb Pa in . during "Vorld 'Var II, and was di charg d from the s rvice as n lieuten­ ant ( j.g.). oi graduated from th niv r it in 1950 with a BEE d 'gr e. II att nd d the ni ersity under th C.I. Bill. Woie b li e lhat the G.I.'s \ re mor s rious about th ir tucli . H e wrote th lumni \V that th y \ l' "happ to hay th oppor- tunity to improv th m el s. I )1er belie e \V had a mor gen ral knowl dg of world attitudes and the mann r in which peopl cIs \Vb r lived. We appreciat d our responsibility as .. cilizens." Following gradua tion h wa mplo cd in lh ngin > ring cl parl- m nts of C neral Motor and the t el ompany. \Voi al 0 h Id city manager positions for th citi es of liami burg and. idn y, hio. H e left engin ering becau h f It it vasn't nnan 'iall, rewarding. Consequently h e b came th owner of th H arm "Vood lanclard rvi ' tation in Gl nview, Ohio. Through hard work, hi station h as grown steadil ov right \ cars. "Our fr ent rpris syst m r \ arcl an 0\ ner dir II [or hi {forls," he wrote. Woi is CUrT ntly a m mb r of the 10 nl bamb r of omm I' e and the Optimist Club. H e has remained clo e to th niv rsitv o( linn . ata through th y ar mainly b caus h is proud of his IiI; n ota heritng an 1 beli ' \ S that "th Univ r ity is d velopin lead j " \dlO have a main tr am national and world id a . "Possibly one of the fla\ s of our eelu ational instilution is that lhey have b n wall d 01I fro111 our changing so i ,t . Th mU 'l tak a more activ part in national and '.\Torld d bates! R nt e ents in EW'ope, specially Fran e, ineli at that th ir universiti s neeel a good dC,ll o( Pre id nt Moos' 'communiversity.''' Th Woi's hay tra el d xt nsiv 1)' in the nit 'd tates, and Jasl summ r visit cl Eul'op, highlight of th ir European jalU1t ,a s eing the birth pIa es of Woi 's I ar nts and m e ting man orwegian 1'elativ s. The family njoys 'amping, Rshing, house boa ting on It in y Lak , swimming, golf, home n ovi sand slid -s, danCing-an] csp <.:inll 11 L NESOTA f otball games. a1'l married a na ti Duluth ian and has thr hiJ lren - hL 011 st daught r will b a junior at William Woods ge, Fulton, ~rissomi, whil Marcia is a high school senior. IIi ' son, 0[1' y, is a high 'choo! sophomor . 30 AL I I EVil NEW MAA BOARD MEMBER HERMAN J. ARNOTT '24BA

T HE purpo of th Farmer & ;\lechanics aving Bank of linneap­ oli i , as expre sed in its charter, "to receive on depo it uch sum of money that from time to time rna be offered by mariners, tradesmen, cI rles, mechanic , laborers, minors, ervant and other , and to inve t the arne for th u , intere t and advantage of the aid depo itor and their legal repre ntativ ." TIus too has been a 35-year purpo e of H rman J. mott, a p ople' banker" ith F&.;\l inee Februar 1933, and it president ince 1962. Arnott told the Alumni ews that IUs career in bankin wa "more or les accidental." He tarted \ ork at F&:\l as a tan tician under the tut lage of Henry . Kingman, r. - one month befor th "bank hol­ ida ." Reflecting on a pr viou job experience in ew York, he thouaht then, "Well, this didn't la t very long, did it." one of the mutual a ing bank cIo ed permanentl durina tho e d pre sion da S; mott had a career cut for him that ha served a bank and a community \ ell. T\ 0 major concern have pernleated hi busine day . "F }'l hould ha e the power to branch " h aid. :\lmne ota law prohibit this. Durine; numerou legislative e ion he has " ork d to realiz thi ambition­ on which ti cIo el to hi econd conviction. Looking ahead to a futur \ hen F&~l will have a rea onable number of branche in its trad territory - Henn pin Count - he ackno ledae that the bank "can (then) give the kind of a ing advantaae eT\;ce our customer \ ant and exp ct u to give them:' Arnott emision a bank which become "mor and mor a fami! ervice c nter:' To most perhap , bankina i to\ erin , imper onal brick in titution of au tere money-handler - to Amott, and tho e who know him, it i aving bank italit ncar to the world's community. De pite hi knowleda abl involv ment in his field , nott admitt d that he \ as a fru trated chool t acher. In hi "earl dav '" he wanted to teach economic . . . Born and rai ed a f w blo k from Lake alhoun h completed un­ ci rgraduate \ ork at linne ota in 19:.,.1 and moved ea t to the Han'ard raduat chool of Bu in dmini u·ation. In 1932. he cam back to Minneapoli to b in work on < PhD. But in tho day' h n "young in tru tors were a din1 a doz n," the opportunity at F&:\I pre ented. hi bank ha erved the community a one of it .kind in :\lilll1e ota o ha mott. He wa th treasurer of the Downtown oun il for man,: y ar and his work with th Fanul , hil(ll-en' rice di,; ion of th~ nited Fund a a bard memb rand tr asm r, ao back 40 v ar . "I lik to work with pen ion fund ," he aid. nd il1d d 'h do ., a ' for man ears he ha been onn ct d \\;th th ~Iinn apoli Teach r Ii. ti l' III I1t Fund, th tat Inve Ul1ent Fund , and, mol' rec nth', with the lilmeapoli Emplo I R til' m nt Fund a a board member. "I on id r thi a chan to hell out a little bit," mott aid. "P n. i n planning ha b n wld rcroin a lot of chana in th Ia t f \\' year ... it can be difficult to k p abr a t of th tim :' . Herman mott will r tire thi . ar. nd w u. let that it \Yu hi pial d eli anon to thi ar a ,nd it p ople that lead him to an wer, \Vh n asked his plan for the future: "}'lr . \ rnott and I will 'tay ri<1ht hI"" , .::0

EPTE lEER, 196 31 THE UNIVERSITY Enrollment Opens September 5 For Evening Classes at Five Area Locations Ov r 400 cia es will be taught at b earned through night lasses; who c1 noL \ ish to work for a d - five Twin ity locations \ h n fall man graduat COUl" including a gr r who hav sp cine profe - ev ning classe at the niversit special program leading to a mas­ sional in ter sts. b gin September 23. Class will ter of busine s admini tration 1- Th Divi ion's ollns ling offic b held on th niversit' ~ lin­ gr , are availabl . n a ociate in offer 'r i cs t njng lass tu- neapolis and St. Paul campu s, th lib ral art d gre , whi h i ba i- d nt \ iLhout charg . Th offic i MacPhail Center, the St. Paul Ex- all qui alent to the fir t two in 153 icholson Hall, l I phon ten ion nt rand th orthwe t ars of tud leading to the bach- numb r 373-3905. Suburban Ext n ion nt r. The lor of art d gre , is also granted. Th niver ity' librmies and latter, formerly located in Hobbin - eneral E t n ion Divi ion cer­ man recr ational faciliti ar dal High School, this year has tificate in man ar a , among th m open to vening class tucl nt al . b n moved to Carl Sandburg Jun­ liberal art interior d ign, math - And tudent ea on ticket to all ior High School in Golden Valle . matic and sci nc , poli admin­ athl tic e ent and sp cia I rate for H gistrations will b taken S p­ i tration, world affairs and indu - 1inn apolis )'mphon sea on ti k­ tembe'" 5-17 at th follO\ in g time trial r lations, are offered for tho e ets ar < I 0 available. and places: D partment of ev ning classes campus offi , 150 ichol on Hall, telephon Minneapolis Campus Is The 373-3195, Ionday through Friday noon at 4 pm. and at Scene of Library Shuffle 5 to pm. Th large t library shuffi in th liminat w ar and l >ar, sp ciaB. lacPhail nt r, telephone history of th Twin iti is hap­ on Ot rru" olum s. Th ' Iibraf) 's 332-4424, Monday through p rung no\ at th niver ity. ome ci ne and t chnolog coll lion Friday at noon to pm. 00,000 to 900,000 books ar being \ ill r main in \ alter Lil rar t. Paul Ext nsion Center, mov d from the East Bank to th tel phon 222-7355, londay \ t Bank of th linn apolis am- through Friday at no n to pus. Wh n th Ilinn apoli' Publi Regents Accept 8 pm. Library moved to its n w 10 ation on the i 011 t Mall, om 550,000 New Chair andbUl"g Junior High S hoI, olume w r tran ferr d. eptem b r 5, 6, 9, 10, 11 at Th tran f r of th ni r ity 8:30 am. to 4 pm.; ptember grant by charitable LIu t for th Library'S humaniti sand 0 ial i- establi 'hm nt [a hair in} diat- 16 and 17 at 6 pm. to nc volumes from Walt r Librar pm. ric ardiolo at th ni er it to the n w $10-million Wil on Li­ wa a cepted Jul 12 by the Complet r gi tration by mail is brary started ugust 5 and will ersit Board of H g nt". possible for clas es with non-lim­ conti.nue through ugu t 30. Th tru t s, First Trust om­ Limit d library r ic is bing it d nrollment. pan of t. Paul and P tel' maintain d dw"ing th mov. \1 il­ dditional information and regis­ D\ an, son f Dr. and Ir . Paul son Library op n pt mb r 3 on tration mat rials can be obtain d F. D\ an, Bl omington, linn ota, r gular summer hour - 7 :45 a~. by calling any of th telephone off r d th R g nts ,40,000 ar numb rs list d above. to 5:00 pm. Monday through Fn­ day, los d aturday and unday. for 20 ru' [or th support of a Ev ning class s ar off red in th hair to b kno\ n a th Paul F. 011 ge of Lib ral rt , th 011 g. Th gigan ti mov is bing han­ dl d by a privat firm which hired and Faith . D\ an hair in P diaL­ of Edu ation, th School of Busl­ ric arcli log . Th nel wm nL is n s dmini tration, tb In titut tlld nt h Ip rs t c mpl te th job. d signed Lo ontinu th t aching, of T chnology and tb oll eg of Handling of th bo ks was limit c1 r s ar·h and pati nL c. r in an area Agri ultur , For stry and Hom to taking them off th old h Iv in which Dr. Dwan pion red and E onomic . Ba h lor's d gre scan and placing them n th n \ - t L EvV 32 in whi ·h h ha shown sp 'ia! in­ p rcent incr a 0 er last year' to- l r st r r 30 year . Centennial tal of 2.5,4.66. Th 196 e sion r. D\ an graduat d from th have rv d mor tlldent than any ni ersity in 1924 and r c ived hi To Go Co-ed other in the ni rsity's hi tory. • do tor of medicin degr in 192 In ept m ber entennial hall will The ollege of Liberal Art ha from th Harvard chool of Med­ become the second co ducational the largest numerical irlcrea e in icin . H has been on th c!ini a! r sidence hall on th linn apolis tud nt : 597 over la t year, for a staff of th niversity' d partm nt campu . Pion r hall has been coed current total of 3, ,The Grad­ of p diatrics since 1931 and is now sinc 1961. uate School, oll e of Education, a linical prof sor. He wa on Two hundred and ighty places Institute of T chnology, choo! of of th organiz rs and a form r out of entennial' 66 -person ca­ Bu ine dmirlistration and Gen­ pr id nt of the 1inn ota Hart pacit will be occupi d by women eral Coll ge al 0 show ub tantial ss ciation. who \ ill use four of the residence' O'rowth, accordinO' to \ . Donald hou es, sharing the elininp; faciliti Beatty, ni\'er ity r cord r. with th r st of ent nnial and The Twin itie campus cur- New Electronic Territorial hall.. 111 V will hav l' ntly ha 11,231 tud nt enrolled. th iT 0\ 11 loune; s, in' addition to On the Duluth campu ther are Program Form ed common !oung s and TV room 1,07 und r aduate plu 116 with th m n, and wa hroom and QTaduat tudent , who e enroll­ ne\ privat u of the form r party ment is r gi tered in the Graduate gram room. chool on the Twin itie campu. o d hou in ha proven ex­ The Iorri campu ha 22 tudent . t:rem I popular in Pion er hall, ac­ cording to Don Finlay on, elir ctor of hou in . In an opinion lIr\, y Morri Nalnes for and again t c ed hou ing, Pio­ n er yoted re ounclingly in it fa- Fir t Provo t or - 5 to 90 p rcent "for". Pio­ n er ourt th women' ection of Rodney . Bri th hall, i alway th fir~t dom1 a Dean of th fill d at the be u'll1ing of the 'ear, and women on it waitillO' Ii t tay on it all year, not accepting altel:­ nati\' hou ing in oth r re idence hall . 1947 Record Is Toppled

e ond wnm r ion 111' 11m nt at th . ni\'er it)' ha topped the r cord " 'orld \Var II veteran' en­ rolhl1ent of 1 47 - by jll t 100 tu­ d nt , Th 1947 nr

ear . Th ombin d both 196 ummer .·j n i' :..9,- pre. nt 14 r prt' cnting n \ h pping 16 PT m ER. 1 33 THE ALUMNI Rice County Alumni Rediscover Celestial World

Twenty-s ven chola tic lead rs of ix Rice County high schools, th ir school counselors, spon or and University of Minne ota alumni udd nly went "back to choor' April 22. At the annual banqu t for the top cholars, spon or d by the Rice County Chapter of the ni­ ver ity of Minn sota lumni sso­ ciation in Faribault, att nde s took an impromptu coll g short cour e in the fascinating subj ct of tronomy. PART OF the group of 27 top scholars of six area scl/ools, members of th e RIce The principal speaker was Karli County chapter of the University of i\lilllleso ta AluInlli AssocUilion , and spOllSor of Kaufmanis, Gold n Valley, profes­ student guests at the chapt r's allllual ScllOlars Banquet arc pictured aiJot) . III ct sor of Astronomy at th niversity photo is of Karlis Kaufmal/is, as oci(lt e profes or of trol/Omlj at lillllesota, who W(lS the pT'incipal speaker. t the head lable, sta nding, left 10 ril!!'lt , (Ire: L. E. lVallbcrg. of finn sota, and a former as 0- master of ceremonies; Prof. K(lufmalJis, Robert Burke alld Miss Iberia 'lars/loll, ciate teach r in his native Latvia, dinner co-chairme l1. in Germany. H has b n at th Univ rsity of Iinne ota ince 1962. An authority on astronomy and Mankato Chapter mathematic and in popular de­ mand as a lecturer, hi topic wa Hears Wenberg NOTI T "Through Time and Spac ." EE CLAS Rol ert Burk , president of the 111e ilankato lumni iation local U of f Alumni unit, op n d hard tanley J. 'vVenberg, vie OF '27 the me ting, offi iall y welcom d pr sid nt of the Univ rsity of Min­ Bfth r union of th 1927 the guests and ponsors pr s nt n sota, p ak on "Wh I Th Uni­ EE lass on its 40th anniv r­ and thanked committ men for v rsity 0 Larg ?" at their plil sar was held Hom coming 16th Annual f ting. Dr. F. th ir succ ssful £forts. H intro­ J. night, ·tober ~l, 1967. duced L. E. Swan b rg, 1926 grad­ icker on, presid nt of Mankato group photograph of tho e uate of th U. of M. , who pr sided Stat ColI g, who r eived th \ ho attended th vent. and as mast r of c remoni s. ni ersity's Outstanding chi v - their \ i s, is

DENTAL HYGIENE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION Third Annuol Meeti ng 111 111ird nnual Meting of th D ntal Hygi n Alumna Asso ia­ tion is sehedul d for Tu day, etob r , in the ampu lub, fourth floor of th ofFman Memo­ rial nion. Th r will b a oeial hour from 6:00 to 7:00 pm., with dinn r rved at 7:00 pm. in th THOSE WHO attended the Past Presidents [eeting in early ummer at the Alumni Club in the Sh eraton-Rit;:; Hotel included, back row, from left: Albert H . main dining room. Heimbach '42BBA, Ru II E. Backstrom '25BS IE '21?11 ME, Dr. Georae The meting will feature a " ood Earl '06BA '09 ID, Edgar F. Zelle '13BA, Glenn E. Seidel '36IT, Franklin D. Will t I Show," followed b re­ Gray '25BA and Hibbert 1. Hill '23BSCE; front row, from left: Executit;e mark from v ral di tinguished ecretary of the linnesota Alumni Association Ed Haislet '31BSEd '33.HA gue t , including Dr. A. B. Hall; '37EdD, Dr. Harvey elson '22BS '25MD, Arthur R. Hustad '16BA, \ aldo E. Dr. En in chaffer, D an of th Hard II '26BSBus, Unit; rsity President Malcolm Moos, W endell T . Burns ehool of Denti try; Irs. Donna '16BA and Dr. Virgil J. P. LlIlldqu~vt '4·'3HD. k r, th 11 w Director of th Pro- gram in D ntal H giene; lAA Pr ident Ken Glas r, and Ion a k note addre s from 1: 45 to er . Re ervation mu t be made bv Jackson. Th re will al 0 be door 3:15 pm., followed by a cofFe .'.Ionday eptember 9. post-game priz and a rame. break, concurrent e ions runnin cod1:ail.. hour at 4:30 pm., again in Dinner tick ts, at '5.00 p r p [­ from 3:35 to 5:15 pm., a ocial hour the Tormand Room, will conclude son, are availabl from the Dental from 5:30 to 6:30 pm. and dinner the da . Reservation can b made H gi n lumna s oeiation, 205 from 6:30 to 9 pm. Ticket ar by con-tactinO' th eteIinar, .\Iedi­ Coffman nion, niver ity of lIIin­ available for the luncheon, semi­ cal lurnni ociation at 205 CofF- n ota, ~Iinneapoli 55455, tel­ nar and diImer at 10.00 per per- man nion on th niver it cam- phone 373-2466. on. 0 eparate ticket will be pus. old for the eminar. pon or MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY ALUMNI Tenth Anniversory Reunion, Clo .. of 195B ASSOC IA TlON table are a ailable at . 0.00 for a Second Annuol Meeting table of eight; patron tabl at In cooperation with the \ eteIinar. 100.00 for a tabl of eight. :\Iedical lumni ociation, the pecial luncheon will b held 10-vear r union of the cla of 19- at noon on 0 mb r 7 for all of will be held ptember 21. The th pan 1 member , di cu ion program will coincide with that of lead r , ke fa cult), board mem­ the Eighth nnual R union of the ber and pa t pre ident . ociation, Ii ted above, until eve­ ning. t 6:00 pm. the PTOUp ",ill VETERINARY MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION hay a p cial co ktail hour in the Eighth Annuol Reunion u rna Room of the ormand", followed b ' a dinner at 7:30 pl~l . Re ervation mll t be made by ep­ temb r 9. hairman of th ev nt i Tom Luca '5 DY.'.l.

Alumni Boord.Foculty Stog SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION The annual lumni Board-Facultv ALUMNI ASSOCIATION tau of th dical 15th Annuol In.titute atur-

a h has b n r S f\'e] for alumni and th ir [Ii nd . Th eat m'e in th tand nd not in the blea h- EPTE~lBER, 1 6 3 · ',j ,OO f r faculty memb 1's, Wi s of alumni and faculty attending th tag a1' invited to att nd th Guthrie Th atr 's pr sentation of "Twelfth ight:' at $3,90 p l' I r­ son,

Five-Ye.or Reunion, Closs of 1963

The Normandy Hotel is also the site of th fi -year reunion of the Class of 1963 on Saturda , pt m­ ber 21. Dinn r follows a co ktail hour beginning at 6:00 pm, in th Brittany Hoom, General chairman f th e ent is Dr, H erb Hal orson, MI ESOT EA T RA IGE alumni chatted with Dean A. Crawford, UMD professor of education and guest speaker at their April meeting, From the left MINNESOTA ALU MNAE CLUB Ann ual Meeting are George Marlinelti, William perling, Crawford, Ernest elson, District Judge Iitchell Dubow and Pr sident John T1'C llli. lIonorary alum ntis Judge Dr, Jeannette Piccard '42PhD, on­ Dubow acted as master of ceremonies for the m elin g, sultant to the Director of th Mann d Spacecraft Cent r, has ac­ cepted th invitation of th 11in­ East Range Hears UMD Dean nesota IUJnllae Club to r c iv the Today's campll ferm nt is multi­ John Trenti, who ha, rv d as University's Outstanding A hi ve­ faceted, involving collep; adminis­ presid nt of th association for fi\ ment Award at their nnual leet­ trativ and fa lilt agitation on th years, announced that st p ar be­ ing on October 19, 1968, Barbara purpo es and m thod of higher in g tak n t n ourag a more ital chuler '54MA, the assistant dir c­ education, as , II as th b tter­ and a ,ti alumni asso iation I tor of th University's World Af­ publicized stud nt ferm nt, militant fbrming an in orporated group fairs Cent r, will peak to the group or constructive, D an rawford. with nominal annual dues. about "Hussian Worn n Today," UlvID profes or of condar edu­ \\! om ers [or the comill C1 ear Mis chiller bead d th d I ga­ cation, told a gath ring of 40 per­ incllld PI' sid ent D minic 'HofT tion on xchange b hve n th sons at th annual spring dinner of Overs a Education Fund of th the East Hang lumni ociation and cretary-Tr asurer fi ss H ar­ League of Worn n Voter and th in Virginia, linnesota, riet Thoma, Board memh r ar So i t Women's Committee in "Whether th bre, from that f r­ Tr nti, William perling, rn 't 1967, She recently was appointed ment will b t mporarily intoxicat­ ' Ison, onrad Larson, Dr, lIm - to serve on the ,So ational Com­ ing and settl back to old campus ard v ong, eorg ~fartinetti and mission for U ESCO. The m et­ traditions, or wheth r th br' ,ill lar n \ . I on n, ing, which will be h ld at the turn out nuh'itious and healthful, Eight Virginia, linl1 ota high Alumni Club in the Sheraton-Ritz r main to b en," Crawford said, school juniors, , ho ar m mbers [ Hot I, is $3,25 per person, Ti k ts It is his hunch that it would turn the ational H nor 0 i ty, w r can be obtain d by contactinp; the out to bah alth br w, sp ial ucsts at th pril m tina. Minn sota Alumna Club, 205 Coff­ man Union, University of Minn - sota, Minn apolis 55455 t I phone papers r p rting stud nt r arch CE'35 Holds 373-2466. will b gi n at 9:15 am, in fayo uditorium. ft rwards Dr. aron SC HOOL O F DENTI STRY ALU MNI '68 Reunion 11 th Annual Meeting Papermast l' " ill speak on" Psy­ chological tud of th D ntal Pa­ The lass r E 35 hcld th ir 196 Mark yom cal ndar for Friday, tient." Dr, Jam t J ns n will fol Io, anllual I' UT ion at the hom of 1r. Sept mb r 27, for the Alumni Day him with a discussion and TV I 111- and r-.1rs, Van ,Johnson in Program of the School of Dentistr onstration of root canal fi lling and Edina, Minn sota, hail'man J hn­ Alumni Association, R gistratiOl apical cur ttag , in ,re Hall. ,on hea I cl a program lhat in­ b gins at 8:30 am, in th Mayo Lun h on wi ll h s rved at no n in cluded afternoon golf, fol1O\ c'l h uditorium Hall on the finn ap­ th Junior 13allroom of offman a social h nJ' and huck \ agon olis campu , follow d b th , 1- nion, aft r whi h Dr, Pap r­ dinn 1'. or i\[ulligan nt rlain d ominp; remarks of Dean chaff r rna tel' will p ak on " Iinical p­ at th pian, o-chairm n for th and Alumni ssociation Pr id nt plication of H pno is and H no­ 1 69 r union ar rthm L , \ n- Walter Warpeha '38DD, Two an sth sia in D nti try." d rson and Ford G. arIon. 36 MAA ANNOUNCES 1968 OAA Awardee Dies At71

COMMITTEE APPOINTMENTS EL~IER E. "Bert" En~elbert '20 Th foll wing committ e appoint­ Ad ';sory Comm.ittee: I H imbach B B, pr ident and general man­ m nts for th linn sota lumni '42BB, hairman, l\finneapoli ager of t. Paul Book & tationery ssociation w r approved at th ( 1969 ); Russell E. Back trom '25 COJ11p a n~' , died ugust 5 after a Ex cutiv Committ meting on B 1E '2nlS 1E, Minneapoli ; I ngtby illne . H e \Va 71. William F. Braa ch 'OOB '03 ID. llgU t 1. Th dat in par nth s s Born in tephen, ~Iinn e ota, Roch ster; \ endell T. Bum '16 following th ir nam s indicat year Enaelb rt had Ii ed in t. Paul of xpiration of appointment. B , Excelsior; ictor hri tgau for 47 vear . Representatices on th e nio11 '24B g, Wa hington, D. .; G orf!; an unde~graduate Board of Govemors: Minn apoli - Earl '06B '09MD, t. Paul; Frank­ at _ Iinne ota he Fr d J. Dr s r '55AA, 1inneapoli lin D. Gra '25B , ~Iinneapoli ; wa pre ident of \ aldo E. Hard 11 '26B Bu , ~Iin­ ( 1 69) ; t. Paul- Deni O. Bakke the ]J- niver ity napoli ; Hibbert Hill '23B E, '5 B For, t. Paul (1969); \ st 1. tud nt Council Bank - Robert O. tll bing '62B , E 'c Isior; J. D. Holtzerrnann '21B , bu ine mana er ~ l inneapoli ; rthur R. Hustad '16 ~linn apolis (1970). of the 1919 Go­ B , Minneapoli ; Francis L. "Pug" In estment Committee: Jam s ph er and elected Lund '31-35 Iinneapoli; ir il to Gre Friar . Harri '47 'lB , Chairman, 'finn- P. Lundqui t '43 ID, linn ap­ J. H al 0 belped to apoli ; Hermon J. mott '24B oli ; Joe l\Iaun '32B '35LLB, t. ~Iinneapoli V L. initiat student loan fund at ~Iin­ ; allac Bo s '2 Paul; Harve el on '22B ' 25~rD , B Bus. t. Paul; \Vendall T. Burns nota. En lb rt did po t-gradllate :"linneapoli ; CharI Judd Ring r work at the niv r itv of London '16B , Exc Isior; am W. Camp­ '41, Wayzata; Glenn E. eidel '361T, \) 11 '25BA, Iinneapolis; T rranc and at G or e \Va hiI'; ton Diver- ~linn apolis; Edwin . Will on ity, Wa hington, D. . Hanold '36LLB, linneapolis; lif­ '30B EE, l\linneapoli ; Well J. ford . omm r '32BB , Owatonna. \Vri ht '36LLB. linn apoli ; Ed­ Hi upport of the ni\' I' it)' \\'a lLl1llni Honor Committee: ril gar F . Zelle '13B , ~Iinneapoli . con tant and con iderable a b P. P ek '25B ArchE, Chainnan, Ili er ity cllOlor hip Commit­ p arb aeled the William cbolar­ hip Flmd driv in t. Paul and finn apolis (1969); harlotte \ . tee: Irene D. Kreidberg '30BB , t. erved as a tru t e of th Greater hop '27B , \Va zata (1970); Paul (1969 ); John R. Duxbur ' '49 Univer ity Fund from it inception. Edwin . \ ill on '30BSEE lin­ BB , ~Iinneapoli ( 1970) ; lar­ H \Va al 0 a memb r of the neapoli (1971). enc K. Bro '25B , 1Iinn apoli board of director of the ~Iinne ola Past Pre ident & Alumni Fllnd (l971 ). Alumni ociation. In 195~ the niver it, pr nted him "ith their OlltstanclinO" Achi vement ward. NEWS FROM OUTSTATE CHAPTERS lway a r markable I ader in a \'ariet . of community. educational EI ction Year 0 ktail rec ption in and ~\'elfare a th;tie, Engelbert ~ranhattan, an autumn upper and wa a director of th t. Paul th atr part, and attendance at a Chamber of ommer e. And he oncert featuring th l\linn apoli also worked a pr ident of the Ro­ and ymphon, Orch b'a - \ ith mor tary lub, 1951-52; a th fir t pre - ork a ti iti to com . ident of Downtown, In .. 1951-5:.; The ew ork- w J r y and a a m mb l' of the ommitt l I' of th ~Iinne ota on Education of the hamber was rea tivated in th past y ar of omm r . folIo\ ing a ki k-off m tina at­ H \\'a a tiv in th pr gram of the National ch 01 rvic In ti­ tended b r I' - tute, . I"\'ina a its pre ident in Ed 19-4. nel. in 195-1, Eng lbert \\"a Dir t r hOS(,11 rL one of th ":"len of Tt' wl ' apl ointe 1 rs are Don- \linnesot, ." ald Haight, PI' id nt; lo\'d "Red" Pre id nt D"iO"hl Ei enho\\" r W tin and Barbara Ryan, Vi e imit d him to participat in th Pr sid nt ; ~Iarilyn hel "trom, " "hite HOll e onf ren e on Ed­ r tar)'; Jerry Iulvall y. Tr a urer. ucation in 1953. EPTE lBER, 196 37 SEPTEMBER FOOTBALL

Commencing the first Saturday after Labor Day, Sep­ ALUMNI tember 7, the Club will again be open on Saturdays. Mem­ bers are invited to bring in their parties or guests for the C.LUB football games or other events. Call ahead for reservations or special arrangeme nts. The phane number is 336-3031 . NOTES Southern Cal Game Saturday, September 21 . Special buses will be available to and from the Club for all home games. Only $1.00 pe r person. September marks the start of the Alumni Club's sixth year. Membership is over 1300, an active and loya l group of Nebrask a Game alumni. They join in extending an open invitation to all Saturday, September 28. Make the club your rendezvous other alumni of the University of Minnesota (and spouses, p oint with your friends for the games and other s pecial too) to share in the fun and fellowship of this - their own cccasions. exclusive private club.

Anyone who is a member cf the Alumn i Association may apply for membership in the Club. If you are not now a paid JOIN THE CLUB NOW - DURING up MAA member, just send in your $10.00 annual dues to the Alumni Office to start receiving all benefits of the MAA 60-DAY FREE INITIATION OFFER program. To join the Alumni Club you apply for one of the following : We are celebrating the beg inning of another big year. For the 60 day period September 1 through Resid e nt Membership: (alumni from the seven county Twin October 31, 1968 only, the Ex ecutive Committee has City metropol it an area) $36 annual dues, $20 initiation fee waived payment of the initiation fee for new mem­ (fee waived for applications through October 31, 1968), bership applicants. (Resident $20; non-resident $10) Now is the time to join. All MAA members are No n-resident Membership: $10.00 annual dues, $10 initia­ eligible. Use the application form below. tion fee (fee waived for applications through October 31 , 1968), Walk Right In ... Whether you live in the Twin Cities or out of town, you' ll be proud to walk in the door of the University of Minnesota Alumni Club. With its convenient location off the lobby of the Sheraton-Ritz Hotel, it's a perfect place to come for cocktails with friends before or after football gomes, the theatre, symphony - or for private parties, business meetings, banquets - or just leisurely dining. The food and service is deluxe, and the location of the club puts you right in the center of everything going on in the Twin Cities.

Apply for your membership cord now during the 60-day Free Initiation pe riod, ending October 31 .

THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ALUMNI CLUB 205 Coffman Memorial Union, University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. 55455 I hereby apply for a (Resident) ___ (non-resident) ___ membership in the University of Minnesota Alumni Club (without payment of initiation fee if prior to October 31 , 1968). I am now a member of the Alumni Associa- tion: Yes ___ No ___. Check is enclosed for $ , annual dues.

Nome ______

Home Address ______

3 15 Nicollet City ______Zone ______On Th e Moll Serial Number ------38 LUM I EW AROUND &ABOUT

Oltman '64BSAg Hinderma n '64M HA Li ndgren '52BCE Collins '37BC hem E

Chicago, orthwe tern University, Im­ Borden Award in ;-.Jutrition for hi di. ­ Institute of Technology ____ p rial Coil ge London, th Universities tinguished res arch accompli hments in of Paris, Heidelberg and lunich, the the field. ' 17 Techni che Hochschule in Karlsruhe and Mrs. EUa R. McKee '40PhD, as ociate William G. Dow '17BEE, profe or at international meeting in Pari, Co­ profe or of modern languae;e at Cleve­ meritus and past chairman of th nj- penhag n and London. land tate ruversity, was named Fac­ versity of Michigan' Department of ulty Woman of the Year by the Cleveland Electrical Engineering, is currentl n­ '47 tate niv r ity Alumnae ociation. ior res arch g ophy ici t (outer pac) OliaeT C. Christiansen '47B leE grad­ Active in ilie AAU\ , Mr . l\lcJ\:ee al 0 in the d partment's pace Ph ic Re- uated in lay from the 53rd ion of works closel wiili tudent committees arch Laboratory. He i also involved, the dvanced Manag m nt Progran) of and hasturued abroad under a Fulbrie;ht along with hi n w wif who is Director the Harvard niversity Graduate chool grant. of the Program in pain for travel and of Busine s Admini tration. The program tudy of oung peopl , in Mi higan Lan­ is design d to pro"id mature executive '46 guage tudie broad. Prof:s or Dow with an o\' rview of bu ines admini tra­ Dr. Curtis W. Roane '46PhD, has b en attributes his int r st in the Program to tion and prepar ili m for th broad promoted to full profes or at Vir ima < n in-retirement hobb of stud , of the r pon ibilities of core manae; ment. Tech College of griculture, Black bur , lane;uage, cultur and politic of pain Virginia. He ha been on the plant pa­ and L,ltin Am ri an countries. '52 ilioloK [lnd ph)' iolog: faculty since '37 William R. Lindgren 'S2BCE ha be n 1947. appoiJl ted sup rintendent- heet cold re­ duction departm nt at teer- Gary '47 he t and Tin \ orks. A native of Hib­ Richard .V. Cardozo '47PhD, as ociate bing, l\linne ota, Lindgren went to work prof or of marketing in Minnesota' at ilie plant a an operating trainee follow­ Graduat chool of Busine dmiillstra­ ing hi graduation. tion, ha rec ived a grant from ilie Ameri- can 0 iation of dverti iner (feneie Agriculture ______Educational Foundation, aloner' with Profe or Robert J. Hollou:ay, p"rofe or of marketing and director of tile C nter '64 for Experimental tudie in Bu ines . J Try L. 011 mOll '64B g ha been Prof - or Holloway and Cardozo will promoted to m)) captain. ign d to in"e tig, te the different the 23rd Field Aml ' upport Command umers u I' to categorize product and Headquarter Company, Capt. Oltman adverti em nts, and to make d ci ion to , as last tationed with the 9ili Inf ntr" purcha I' or not to purcha I' products. Divi ion in Vi tnam. He hold the The ' will particularly compare I w-in­ Bronze tar f dal, thre award of the come con um r with tho I' of non-ill - ir 1edal and th Vietname I' Gallantr ad\'antaged ~oup . ros . tanlcy J. W enberg ' 47~1A, fue Uni­ ver it)' of ~!inne ota' vi I' pre ident for Graduate ______Edu ational Relation, hip and De\'elop­ m nt, re eived an honorary dee;r I' of Doctor of Law from t. ~lary' oile!!:!'. '40 " 'inona, linne ota "in r o!!:nition of hi high character, hi worth,' ideals and his con tructive int re t in III n an I women and mo\' ments tending to ilie ruifu ion of Truth through Edu ation." '64 Garth E. Hinderman '64 ~!RA ha b en ,ppointed to as i tant dire tor of lara ~faa s lemorial Ho pital, Belle\'iew, 1 ew Jer '. III' \\;U be r pon ible for coordinating the ursing en'ice, ho I of Nuring and dmitting d partment . EPTE IBER, 1 6 39 Medica 1______G orgia. II wa assign d to Walter \ omen r I' two terms, and s rv d thr e Re d ill 1968 aft r completing the d­ terms a a director of th 1iller Me­ '34 van ed Offlcers' Cour e at Fort am morial Hospital board of trust e . IIow­ Hou ton, T xa . ever, her major int rest i in th fi ld of Dr. Douglas L. lohnson '34MD is CW'­ ed uca tion . With the b lief th t in order r ntly in Vietnam erving ivilian 011 an '60 to d velop th full pot ntial of th na­ AM -sponsor d volunteer program. Dr. l ohn R. Sebald '6 0~ID , a r sid nt tion , apabl and d erving stud nts '47 in orthopedics at th Mayo Uni , Roch­ should nol be deni ed intelJ ctual ppor­ est r, Minn sota, i erving a three-month tunit b eau e of lack of fund , sh is Dr . Ivan Ba1'OI1ofsky '47PhDMed has tour of duty in Tunisia ,vith MEDICO, co ns qu ntly th founder of th e John been named profes or and chairman of a s rvic of CARE. H joins a {EDrCO C. Dwan Educational Foundation. And th Depal'tment of Surgery at Hahne­ team a i ting with the ortllOpedic pro­ sh is a pr nt memb r of the Board of mann M dical College and Ho pital, gram at Em t Conseil Hospital, Tunis. R gen ts of 1arquette niver ity, 1il­ Philadelphia. 'fost recentl Dr. Baro­ The team is also helping to train local waukee. nofsky has be n clinical profe or of sur­ physi ians. Hi wife, a regist red nur e, is gery at SC, con ultant in thora i sur­ also working a a volunteer. '48 gery at the .S. j a al Hospital, San CLA ______Charles Wierscli '4 BB ha been Di go, and research as 0 iate at cripps tran f rreel from manager of the Motors CLni and R s arch Foundation. Insurance Corporation bra. ch, I hoenix , '15 Arizo na, to th e K nsas Cit, Misso uri '59 Mrs. John C. Dwan '15B , Duluth, branch. Dr. Deem T . Schamb r '59MD, as ist­ Minn so ta, rec i ed th Papal Medal of ant chi f of Ul'ology at Walter Re d Gen­ Ilonor, Pro Eccl si. et Pontifice, con­ '66 eral Hospital, has been promoted to fen d by Pop Paul I, in April. Th Daoid E. Netz "66BA was r ntly lieut nant colonel. Previous assignment medal is giv n to men and women who promoted to Army first lieutenant during included the U.S. Amly Hospital, Fort merit public recognition from the Pope. ceremoni s near oul, Kor a. An ad­ Campb II, Kentucky; Letterman Gen ral Mr . Dwan organized th Bureau of ministrati ve officer in th Eighth U .. Hospital, San Francisco, California; and Catholic Chariti s in Duluth, was pre i­ rm y Headquarter , Lt. etz nter d th e Martin Army Hospital, Fort Benning, dent of the Diocesan Council of Catholic ervic in May 1966.

Irene Kreidberg . . . siz Iuch m r today, th an arli r. h i maintain- Sh works clos ly with the School's Annual Institute, ing h r respon ibility - this year sh heads th 196 now in its 15th year. For all those years she has han­ Hom coming lunch on, an innovation mo ing to\ ard dled the hotel and keynote banquet arrang m nts for uccess. thi successful project. Iren loves and enjoy th niver ity. Sh tau O'ht Charles Wither records management, as a visiting instructor, on the "It is difficult for a newspaper editor in a growing Minneapolis campus in 1966 and 1967 in addition to city of 50,000 to avoid being involved in all kind of couns ling graduating high school students and college civic proj ct and I am no c ption," With rs wrot . nior on job application. And he wa advisor to th " lthou?;h a a matt r of poli not tak part Women's Club of the chool of Business. in any fund-raising or 'publi ity' aeti iti s, 0 r th "Many mol' worn n wer ntering the busin ss y aI'S I hav b en involved in countl s ci ic, har­ world when I ,. as at the University," h said. "Ther itable, welfare and cultur organization ." are a limited number entering now. I think it is erron - A ' a journalist, With l' is a past pI' idnt of th ous that many of th girl think th y can do qually Fir t Di tri t Editorial A so iation, pa t PI' id nt of well by going to s cretarial s hool and th n going into th 1inn ota A so iated PI' ssociation, pa t th business world . . . but it all dep nds on what chairman of th w Executi e onferen at the they want to do." niv rsity of Minn sota, and a memb l' of th m 1'- Acknowl dging that th r is all th m I'it in th ican Soci t of wspaper Editors, ational onfer­ world to being a Dniv rsity graduat if you ar inter­ enc of Editorial Writers, A ociat d Pres lanaging ted in busin s, she aid that the demand for worn n Editors ssociation, International PI' s In titut and graduates today far xc eds the p rsonn 1. the Int r-Am J'ican Pr ss As ociation. II' n , who says that " very thing I'v want d to do H e is also a memb l' of the Minn ota F air Trial- I've don to th b t of my ability and hav gon along Fr Press ouncil. on that basis," ha almost a hous ful of awards and His avocations a1' golf, th sto k mark t an 1 citations for h l' work. Each of thes has its signifi­ J' ading. cance for her; but th itation which affect d h l' mol' With I' wrote that he has maintained an affiliation than any other was the niv rsity's Outstanding with th e Univ rsity "be au I f 1 that a str ng chievement ward. lwm1i ssociation should b ,and an be, a our "I always rem mber the day I op n d th I tt -r from of gr at h Ip to an institution of high r I arning." Dr. Wilson telling me that I was select d to r c ive H is a past pI' sid ot and fonner diJ' tor of th it on September 30, 1967. It was a gr at day!" MAA Roch t r hapt r. Iren feels that alumni today have a re ponsibility Vie ar ind ed fortunat to hay his rvi n our to playa vital role in th Uni ersity b caus of its board. 40 L i[NI NE\ S from Richfield High School and att nded for more than 50 years. He was pre ident the Diversity for two year before en­ of the Minneapolis Dental Di trict 0- DEATHS listing in the Army in 1967. He was ciety in 19.33 and of the lIiinnesota assigned to Korea in January, 1968. Dental Convention in 1946. The doctor Donald G. Jensen '42BEE, Waukegan, also served as chairman of the Hennepin IllinoiS, died in 1968 at ag 49 from County and Minnesota' elfare Boards. Miss Su an Aschman '63MA, Aliquippa, canc r. H wa a 21-year mploye of Max H . Miller '43BME '4;3B B, Penns}lvania, died Jun 14. Ho m r-Waldorf, Inc., and wa produc­ 10und, 1inn sota, executive vice presi­ Fred Alfred Baumann, Jr. '.38B B, Los tion manager of the , aukegan-Gume dent and general manager of Alpana Ang Ie, alifornia, died eptemb r 22, plant at the time of his d ath. Jen en was Aluminum Products, Inc., died fay 30, 1967, in alifornia. lIe wa a native of a memb r of cacia frat rnity. 196 . He was 47. Miller wa a design Minn sota. Dr. Clifford C. Laurence '61DVM, and consultant engineer for everal Oscar C. Burkhard 'OlBA '04MA, 1ar­ Clara City, Minn ota, died March 11 at Minneapolis area finns, including 3M, and tinsville, irginia, di d Jun 14. He wa ag 31. He had practiced veterinary erved with treater tore Fixture for fonn r profe or and h ad of th G T- medicine in Clara City ince 1961. and 20 years before joining Alpana. He was a man D partment at the niyersity for wa a m mber of Phi Zeta and Alpha lecturer on merchandiSing and store la - veral year. amma Rho fratemitie, the eterinary outs at tile Universities of linne 0(.1, Marie tterbury Burkhard '06B , 1ar­ 1 dical A ociation, Lions Jub and th ~Iichigan and Iowa. tinsvill, irginia, died in Octob r, 1967. Clara ity school board. Victoria Kay Miller '6;3-'66, fonner!) Jolm II. Daniels, Jr. '34 lIlA, Red Mrs. Corliss Golding Lutes '6;3BAEd, of t. Paul, died unexpectedly June 30 in Bank, l ew Jer y, died June 26 following linnetonka, 1inne ota, died July 20 at an Francisco. he was 23. Born in 1iI­ I ng illn . lIe was 40. Though born age 43. Mr . Lut was a member of the waukee, Ii s filler al 0 attended the in Minneapolis, Daniels lived as a hild L ague of Women Voter in' a hington, Univer ity of Colorado, and was em­ in an kin g, China, where hi FaLber wa D.C., and a charter memb r of th ployed by Eastman Kodak Compan} in sup rintendent of the anking niversity Minnetonka club. he was a board mem­ an Francisco. Hospital. Aft r graduation from Minne- ber of the 1innetonka League in 1960-63 ota, D. ni ls was a r sident in lIo pital and has served as local item chairman. In ~finneapoli native C. R. Carlson Administration at the Lewi ton (Pa.) 1961 he was appointed by Gov mor '24:\1 AgE, reCipient of the Diversity' Hospital. IIi military s r ice was aloin Andersen to the tate 'Vater Pollution Outstanding Achievement Award, along the hospital B Id a h r ed a Com­ dvisory Committee and ,vas a Day \vith then enator Hubert H. Hunlphre) mander of Pati nts (Fir t Lieut nant Camp Die ctor of the Girl couts of and enator \i ayne Morse in 1959, died F) at the 1500-bed Samp on Air America. ugust 11. He wa 67 . Carlson was For Ba e IIospital, eneva, w York, ]. IcDollough '2 B Ed quoted as saying that he tarted out "a and a Chief Admi]li trati Officer of a '39 I , t. Paul, di d July 16 at age 74. clo a I could to the bottom" with John militar f Beld ho pi tal in H headed the t. Paul F deration of D re and Company in 1925. He becam 1952-53. Teachers when it conduct d tile nation' eDior \ice preSident in charge of mar- ft r discharge, Dani ls ~ assistant fir t tach r ' strike in 1947. ~lcDonough keting for the Illinois-based fum in 1957. Dir ctor at orth hore Hospital, ~Ian­ \Va a ocial cience director at Humboldt On the company's board of die ctor ha et, ew York, 1955-60. From 1960 I-Iiuh chool and had erved for 20 years 1945 Carlon headed tile ~Iinne­ until February 1965 h assumed duti a vice pre id nt for the tate Federation apoti aI' office for 13 years before be- \\ hich n ompas d o~ ' r-all admini tra­ of Teacher executive board. He al 0 ominu a vice pre ident. He was a me01- tive up rvisi n of a teadily growing wrot a hi tory of the teacher fed ration b r of the board of director of the institution, d veloping it into a major for til finn ota Hi torical oci ty. ~Iinneapolis Chamber of Commer e and t aching facility and affiliatin <1 at d part­ Dr. Thamas J. Mee '12DD , :\finne­ had erved a three-year term on the co­ I1wnt leveb with b th th 1 \ York apoli , died July 21 at au 6. Dr. ~[ ee nomic ad\ i Ory co~nmitte of til U .. ni"",r it , chool of Iedicin and th had practiced denti try in ~rinn apoli- Chamber of Commerce. Bell HIC Hospital. During his year of directorship 0\ cr 6 million in constmc­ tion pl,lnning and actual constru tion happen d. H becam administrator of Rh r iew llospital in 1965 after being a princip, l in th hospit. I con ulting film of John t inl sociates, Gar­ d n City, 1 W York. nder his admini - you get tration th iz of the ho_pital doubled with an ambitious and farsight d pro­ nrn Everyday interest in serving you gram, and h upen i d many imprO\'e­ mUI " and high bank interest on your m nt and inno ation in the ho pitat's total program. His kill laid the founda­ • savings. Specialists in home tion to m rgenc of Riven'i \ a a multi-f. c t d community health ent r Interest loans and savings services since \ ith the mo t ophL ticated technologi al 1874. low cost equipment; h t the pattern for true savings accounl ommunit r i . ~ M @ Myroll R. Dossett '13-'l7IT, e\ at r & loans available. Rochell, I w York, di d June 6 ,t ag 73. As an ar hit t, he de igned h uses on Long Island and office interiors. Da tt al 0 ,tt nd d olumbia niver- F armers & M eChaniCs ity and \Va a diplomate of th e E 0 1(' d s Beaux rts of Pari. SAVINGS BANK OF MINNEAPOLIS p c, 4 Jan . lTolmdahl 1 , l inl1C­ MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION apolis, di d Jul 20. II was 22. B rn in 10lndal, \ den, IIohndahl gr dunted EPTE IB' R, 196 41 For Your Comfort Something New

GOPHER "Bag For Two"

Keeps you snug in any kind 01 weather

While watching football or other outdoor sports­ out on the back. Comes in a handy cushion style remain warm and dry in this storm-proof bag for case with built-in carrying handle. Case is made two persons. GOPHER BAG FOR TWO is a com­ of a white vinyl material with maroon "M" on one bined blanket, with ponchos and hoods for two side and our "Golden Gopher" on the other. Ter­ people. Made of tight woven nylon treated with rific for any outdoor sports use. Easy to carry along polyurethane. Stays flexible in all temperatures. for hunting, fishing, skiing trips. Price to members, Has scoop roll type hood and easy action zippers $16.95 postage paid; $19.95 to others. Delivery for quick on-off use. Colors are maroon with white time 3 to 4 weeks. Add 3% sales tax if you reside trim. Has "Minnesota Golden Gophers" printed in State of Minnesota.

Minnesota Alumni Association 205 Coffman Memorial Union University of Minnesota Gift Department

Please send me __ Gopher " Bag For Two." Enclosed is my check in amount of $ • including 3% soles tox if Go Go Gophers applicable.

I am a member. Cord serial no. ______Name ______Use it as an 011- weather seat cushion, Address ______tool City ______State ______Zip __ ORDER YOURS NOW

42 L J I E\, " ... any man who doesn't believe in life insurance deserves to die once without having any." - WILL ROGERS

*YOU CAN AFFORD MORE PROTECTION ... BECAUSE IT COSTS LESS. Increase your estate by $10,000 with Group Term Li fe Insu r­ • Generally No Physical Exam .. . usually only the short state­ ance ... once your insurance is effective, cash benefits will be ment of health on the enrollment form is necessary. paid for death at any time, in any place, from any cause­ • Beneficiary . . . you name your own beneficiary, which you aircraft accident, heart attack, auto crash, blood poisoning, may change at any time. Special beneficiary arrangements can pneumonia, etc. be made to fit your own requirements. Settlements of death Amount of Group Semi-Annual claims as a monthly income may be provided. Your Age Insurance" Premium • No Premium To Pay While Disabled . .. your life insurance premiums are waived and insurance remains in force if you 20-24 $10,000 $ 13.00 become totally and permanently disabled (as defined in the 25-29 10,000 16.00 contract) before age 60. 30-34 10,000 20.00 • You May Change ... to a permanent individual policy which 35-39 10,000 26.50 builds cash values for retirement. When you terminate member­ 40-44 10,000 36.00 ship in MAA, when you reach age 70, or when any insurance 45-49 10,000 51 .00 terminates because of a change in age beyond age 60, you 50-54 10,000 73.50 may convert your life insurance to any of the individual policy 55-59 10,000 108.00 forms, except term insurance, issued by the insuring company. 60 and Over (. Amount of insurance reduces by $1000 each IT'S EASY TO ENROLL year after age 60. Premiums furnished on re- 1. Complete Group life Insurance Enrollment Card below. quest.) 2. Mail to: Minnesota Alumni Insurance Administrator • You Are El igible . .. if you are a member of the MAA, age 60 P.O. Box 907, Minneapolis, Minn. 55440 or under, and are either actively employed or are an unem­ 3. Send no money now ... you will be notified of the ap­ ployed housewife. (Coverage for residents of Texas, Ohio, New proval of your application and will receive your first Jersey, and Wisconsin is not available at this time.) billing from the Administrator.

Statement of Health The following information is submitted as evidence of my insurability: Last Name (Print) First Name Middle Initial Weight Height ______Have you ever been declined or rated for life insurance?__ Street Address (If yes, give details below) Within the past five years, have you been confined for more than five days by any illness or injury or undergone any surgical City State Zip Code operations? (If yes, give details below) Are you in good health?______Comments: Date of Bi rth Class, or years at U of M

Beneficiary (Print Name as Relationshi p I hereby apply for that coverage for which I am or may become MARY DOE. not MRS. JOHN DOE) eligible under the above Group Policy issued by The Union Central Life Insurance Company, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201 . _~ __ X_____ :::-:---:-- _____ THE UNION CENTRAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. Date Signature Alumni Ass' n Members - Join Honorary Dolphin Club

Members of the Minnesota Alumni Association are invited to become members of the Dolphin Club sponsored by three University graduates who own and operate three excellent motor inns near the U of M and midway b etween the Twin Cities. Th ere is no charge for Dolphin membership to Alumni Association me mbers. MIDWAY MOTOR INN • Home of Famous " Mr. Joe 's" Supper Club YOU WILL ENJOY SEVEN SPECIAL SERVICES . . . • Indoor swimming pool • Roomy Suites • Color TV • Courtesy Bus • Minutes to U of M or downtown 1. A $1 .00 discount at all times on single accommodations. 2 . Your wife and/ or children accommodated at no extra charge in single room or $2.00 discount on doubles. 3. Call us collect for reservations. Just identify yourself as a Dolphin member. 4 . Your Dolphin card is your personal credit cord for all motel services. 5. You receive special late check-out privilege ... 4 p.m . 6 . You receive special service and a discount on gas at approved service stations convenient to the motels. 7. You are presented a Registered Dolphin Key Chain. Lost keys will be returned to you through the motel.

TWINS MOTOR INN Inn of the Black Knight Restaurant • Spacious meeting rooms • Pool • Color TV TO: Executive Office - Dolphin Club • Exceptional lounge and entertainment 1964 University Ave., St. Paul, Minnesota 55104

Please send my Dolphin Club Membership Card and Key Chain

Name ______,Class _____

Address ______

Cily ______State' ______Zip, _ ___ _

Signed ______

You ore invited to recommend friends and business associates for Dolphin Club membership. Send us their nome and address and we will UNIVERSITY IMPERIAL "400" MOTEL furnish application cord. (A968) • Kitchenettes • Pool. Jogging distance from U of M ------• Bus service to either city at the door FREE PARKING * FRIENDLY PEOPLE * FABULOUS FOOD ... Where the Twin Cities Meet

FREE BUS SERVICE TO ALL GOPHER AND VIKING FOOTBALL GAMES FROM TWINS AND MIDWAY INNS FOR GUESTS OF ALL THREE MOTElS Phone 612-645-0311 collect for Reservations THE UNIVERSITY OF M1NNESOTA

OCTOBER 1968 How we helped a 35 million dollar Swedish immigrant get started in America.

Site selection assistance and routine petitive wage and salary scales in our financing are standard services you area for various occupations required . expect from a metropolitan bank. That's what Sweden's Barnangens 5. Helped with the recruiting of qual­ Vademecum, Inc. asked of us. ified em ployees. We went seven steps further. 6. Assisted in locating raw material and packaging suppliers. 1. We assisted Barnangens Vademe­ cum, Inc. in defining construction 7. Provided office space to their execu­ costs and provided introductions to tives while exploratory meetings were area construction companies. being held, and prior to the comple­ 1. Provided interim and permanent tion of their orth American head­ financing for their plant facilities, quarters in Minneapolis. equipment, and seasonal borrowing You don't need a Scandinavian name needs. to get this kind of service from N orth­ 1. Assisted the company in selection western Bank. We're eager to work in of competent professional services. every way possible to help you get es­ 4. Provided their management com- tablished in Minnesota. Call us today. j Northwestern National Bank of Minneapolis .YOUR FELLOW ALUMNI NOW WITH CML

Robert P. Aholo '64 Duluth Robert W. Hamel '47 Minneapolis Terry M. Anderson Minneapolis F. Edword Hughes '50 Duluth Norman R. Brown Chicago David C. Kolstad '67 Minneapolis Robert C. Buchholz '44 Asheville, N.C. Jerry C. lothrop '66 Minneapalis Donald C. Co rison '67 Duluth J. Denis McCarthy, M.D. '59 Home Office William J . Cooper '41 Minneapolis Michael Meland '61 Minneapolis Gory R. Davis '67 Minneapolis David l. Noland 'SB St. Paul John E. Gunderman South St. Paul Charlton le Roy Stone '37 Minneapolis Order It Now GOPHER 118a9 For Tw oll

A combination a ll-wea ther blanket and pon­ cho with hoods for two. Made of tightly woven treated nylon with scoop roll style hoods and easy action zippers. Breaks the wind, keeps you snug in any weather. Colors are Maroon with White trim; " Minnesota Golden Goph­ ers" printed on the back. Comes in handy cushion style white vinyl carrying case. Ter­ rific for outdoor sports use. Price to members is $16.95 postage paid; $19.95 to non-mem­ bers. Delivery 3 to 4 weeks. Minnesota resi­ dents add 3% sales tax.

"' Mi;n-;s~~AI;m:iA:s:;-c:t:';;--=-Gif-;-Oe; .-----" 205 Coffman Memorial Union, University of Minnesota : Minneapolis, Minn . 55455 I Pl e ase send me ____ Gopher " Bag For Two". En- I closed is my check in amount of $ r ""inn - including 3% Minnesota sales tax if applicable. I am a member. Card serial no. I eSQta I N o me ______r Address ______I Ci~ r State Zip I ------,

Dain, Kalman & Quail knows what makes champions grow . __because we've got a ringside seat_ Champions like General Mills a nd over 60 other n ational, publicly-held firms live next door to us_ So our 6 Chartered Financial Analysts research them in depth to bring you the facts on investment opportunities in this region. We offer: Investment Banking / Investment Management / Municipal Bonds / Mutual Funds / Listed and Unlisted Securities. An Equal Opportunity Employer.

DAIN,KAld!flllf & QUAIL / Investment Research With a Regional Accent MEMBER NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE MINNEAPOLIS/ ST. PAUL Billings I Brookd ale I Caspe r I Davenport I Dubuque I Duluth I Farg o I Grea t Fall s I Minneapolis Minot I Ottumwa I Rochester I St. Cloud I St. Paul I Si oux Fal ls I Southdale I Waterloo

4 Fulbright Has the Competition ~Ma Closes Soon MINNESOTA new job CHAIR ompetition is now open for 1969-70 U,S. Fulbright fun grants gotten old? and travel grant , foreign graduate grants for acad mic study or re­ search abroad, and for profes ional If it has .•• then the three minutes training in th creative and p er­ it will take you to fill out this forming art, coupon could be the most important Grants are available to more than three minutes of your career. 950 American graduat tudents for Because we 're Management Recruiters. The " match­ stud in any of 50 countri s, Candi­ makers." Professionally dedicated to bringing to­ dat s must be "citizen at the gether the job needs of ind ustry and the individ ual. tim of application, have a bach­ We have 62 offices in the U. S. and Canada, em ­ plOYing a unique method of counseling with specific elor' degr e or it equivalent be­ Industries and professions. To assure reliability and for the beginning date of the grant results. and, in most ca es, be proficient in We have successfully matched over SO ,Ooo men the language of th ho t country, with 5,000 of the best companies in the country, I tions are made on th ba is We can make a successful match for you , too. In just five days, you ' lI have the entire matchmaker of academic and/ or profe ional organization working for you - If you mall thiS r cord, the f a ibility of the appli­ qUlck ·fact form today. cant' proposed stud plan, lan­ auage preparation and per onal r------qualifications, Preference is given Comfortable and beautiful! Come in NATIONAL AlUMNI SERVICES DIRECTOR lu trou black fini b with gold trim. Management Recruiters InternatIOnal to applicants b tween the ages of 1001 EUClid Avenue - 5th Fl oor 20 and 35, And for that extra ''personal touch" Cleveland, OhiO 44115 , . . tbe linoesota eal has been at­ Cr ative and performing am t tractively ilk creeoed io gold 00 the N.me ______ar not required to have a bach­ froot of tbe chair. The classic tyLing fit rigbt into any room decor whether AddlUs ______elor' degree but mu t ha e four in your home, office or studio, CII' ______St'te __ z,p ___ y ars of profe sional tudy or equival nt eA'Peri nee. pplicants IDE L HRISTMA GIFr for an Phone _____ 0 OH"e 0 Home ~Iiooe ota alumnus . . . but order in social work must have at lea t now to insure delivery in time for t\ 0 ear of profe ional experi- Christma, Our deadline for order Colleee Of UnlVenlty Altended ______nc after the rna ter of ocial calliog for pre-Christmas delivery is ovember 11th! M.,OI ____Oee .. e ___ yUl __ work degre . Applicant in the field of medicine mu t have an LD. at Price to member is just 34,50; noo· Prtsent PosItion Oescflbe ______member, 37,50. Shipped to ou ex­ th tim of application. pre collect from Gardener, lass. Full award prOvide tuition main­ (Add 3 % tate Excise Tax TO I tenan for one academic ear in TOTAL, linnesota resident ooly.) on cowltr round-trip tran porta­ ~------~ Income R1nee tion h alth and acid nt in urance I Minnesota Alumni Associotion and an incidental allowance, lim­ I o $1.000 - $11.000 o $11.000 - SI4 ,5OO 205 Coffman it d number of Fulbriaht travel I o $14 500 - $19,000 o OV

THE UNIVERSITY OF MIN ESOTA THE FOUNDED IN THE FAITH THAT MEN ARE ENNOBLED UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY UNDERSTANDING DEDICATED TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF LEARNING A D THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH DEVOTED TO THE INSTRUCTIO OF YOUTH AND THE WELFARE OF THE STATE ALUMNI THE MINNESOTA ALU MNI ASSOCIATION Edwin l. Haislet '31 BSEd '33MA '38EdD Executive Director Executive Com mittee Kenneth C. Glaser '42BBA Presidenl James A. Watson '42BA ...... First Vice President NEWS Harry Heltzer '33METE ...... Second Vice President Florence M. Lehmann '23BA .... Secretory (Our 68th Y ear) Wa lIace l. Boss '28BSBus ...... , ...... Treasurer Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA ...... • ... Post President Oscar R. Knutson '27LLB ...... Boord Member OCTOBER, 1968 VOL. 68 N O.2 Howard F. Woo '27BA '31 BArch Boord Member Otto W. Quale '40BAJourn ...... Boord Member J. Roscoe Furber '24EE Boord Member 8 Memo from Ed Hai let Maynard A. Speece '43BSAgEd .. Boord Member Richard E. Kyle, Sr. '27LLB Boord Member 10 Mione otan & The Pre idential Race Term expires 1969: John Henry Aides '38MD, Albert H. Heimba~h '42BBA, Grant Johnson '38BSEd '40MA, Richard E. Kyle, Sr. '27LLB, EdwIn A. Martini '23BA '30LlB, Robert W. Olson '38BEE, James G. Peterson 13 Alumni Club ote '40BAAera '49MA, Otto W. Quale '40BAJaurn. Exp ires 1970: Carl M. Anderson '27BA '30LLB, Francis M. Boddy '30BA '36MA '39PhD, Wallace 14 The Door Are Open The Wall Thin l. Boss '28BSBus, Kenneth C. Glaser '42BBA, Mrs. Dixie Ingersoll Goss ' ISBA, Florence M. Lehmann '23BA, Melvin O . Sletten '3SDDS, William F. White '49BAJourn. Expires 1971 : Harry Heltzer '33METE, Oscar R. 18 Minne ota Higher Education and the Knutson '27LLB , Sheldon M. Lagaard '41 BS ' 43MB '43MD, Mrs. Jeannette Prioritie Race R. Piccard ' 42PhD, James A. Watson '42BA, Howard F. Woo '27BA '31 BArch, Irene D. Kreidberg '30BBA, Carl Woie 'SOB EE . Expires 1972: Hermon J. Arnott '24BA, J. Roscoe Furber '24EE, Mrs. Violet Rasacker 24 Your 1968-69 Executive Committee Graf '33·'37, Maynard A. Speece '43BSAgEd, Charles H. Withers '49BAJaurn. 26 We Know Them Representing the Constituent Alumni Associations: Virginia Bechtol '38BS, President, Minnesota Alumnae Club, William H. Ziemer ' 48BSFar _8 The Univer ity 'SSBBA, President, College of Agriculture, Forestry and Home Economics Alumni Association, Richard B. Weigel ' 42BBA, President, School of Business Administration Alumni Association, Dr. Wolter S. Warpeha 31 The Gopher Pre-Game Club '38DDS, President, School of Dentistry Alumni Association, James Garner 'S7BSEd, President, College of Education Alumni Association, Dr . Ken­ 2 The Alumni neth P. Manick 'S6BA '60BS '60MD, President, Medical Alumni Associa· tian, Stuart Starner '6SBA, President, University of Minnesota, Morris, Alumni Association, Robert G. Werness 'S3AMS, President, Mortuary 35 Around & About Science Alumni Association; Mrs. Charlotte linster Boyles 'S4BSN, Presi­ dent, School of Nursing Alumnae Association; Roland O. Leuzinger 3_ D ath 'SSBSPhm, President, College of Pharmacy Alumni Association, Mrs. Joan Keaveny Scott '47BA, President, College of liberal Arts and Un i­ versity College Alumni Association, W. l. Hindermann '29BSCE '37MSCE, THE O"ER: This month's cover pictures Yice President President, Institute of Technology Alumni Association, Robert A. Martens Hubert Htu11phrey, a MilUle ota alumnu and the Demo­ 'S6DVM, President, Veterinary Medical Alumni Association; Catherine crati party's choice for pre ident of th luted tat . A. Rosness '48MSW, President, School of Social Work Alumni Associa· TI1is four-color CO\'er \ a previously u ed in 1966 Januill) tion, Mrs. Mary Neamon Diessner '37GDH, President, Dental Hygiene i ue. We thought it only fitting that it be u ed again - to Alumnae Association, Robert B. Roessel 'S8AA '60BSEd, President, Gen· honor an outstanding alumnu . eral Coll ege Alumni Association, Mrs. Patricio Bardewich 'S2BS '62MS, President, Division of Medical Technology Alumni Association, President, Occupotional and Physica l Theropy Alumni Association - to be elected. Mary Lou Aurell '62BAJourn Editor Representing non-constituent groups: Julius E. Davis '33LLB, President, Edwin L. Haislet ' 31 BSEd '33MA '37EdD Managing Editor Low Alumni Association, James R. Soltau 'S6BS, President "M" Club. Po st Preside nts and Alumni Fund Adviso ry Committee Russell E. Backstrom '2SBSME '27MSME, William F. Braasch 'OOBS '03MD, Second closs postage paid at Minneapolis. Minn., under Act of Wendell T. Burns ' 16BA, Victor Christgau '24BSAg, George Earl '06BA Congress of March 3, 1B79. Annual dues of the Association are '09MD, Franklin D. Gray '2SBA, Waldo E. Hardell '26BSBus, Albert H. $10 of which $8 constitutes a year's subscription to the Alumni Heimbach '42BBA, Hibbert M. Hill '23BSCE, J. D. Haltzermann, '2 1BA, News. Subscription for nan·alumni: $10 per year. Notional ad­ Arthur R. Hustad '16BA, Francis A. Lund '31 -'35, Virg il J. P Lundquist vertising representatives: American Alumni Magazines, New York, '43MD, Joseph Moun '32BA '35LLB, Harvey Nelson ' 22BS '25MD, N.Y. Publisher: Minnesota Alumni Association, 20S Caffmon Charles Judd Ringer '38-'41 , Glenn E. Seidel ' 36ME, Edwin A. Willson Union, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455. '30BEE, Wells J . Wright '36BSL '36LLB, Edgar F. Zelle ' 13BA. Honorary life Association Members 7 Dr. J. L. Morrill, President Emeritus of the University, William T. Mi ddlebrook, Vice President Emeritus of the University; Dr. O . Meredith Wi lson, Gerold T. Mull in. MEMO 11111111111111 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 From ED HAISLET Executive Director

TO Association Members SUBJECT The Most Important People

From the College and University campuses all over America, we have been reading of the many demands of the militant student groups for student power. Lately, black student organizations have been demanding concessions and talking about black student power. Perhaps it is time now to talk realistically about Alumni Power. To a real degree, the greatness of a University can be measured in four ways, • By the eminence of its faculty, • By the quality of its student body, • By the excellence of its libraries, laboratories and research facilities, • By the record of its graduates. A great library, backed up by excellent laboratory facilities and equipment speaks for itself. Greatness can only be achieved with an educationally qualified and experienced faculty, dedi­ cated to teaching, to scholarship, to research; and with a student-teacher ratio that allows proper instruction and supervisory procedures to be had by all students. One measure of aca­ demic respectability is the percentage of Doctorates held by the faculty. For instance, at Min­ nesota, over 60 % of the faculty have their doctors degree. The quality of greatness is directly related to the quality of the student body. It means a care­ fully selected group of students whose college aptitude and high school grades indicate suc­ cess in college work. A quality student body, instructed by a learned faculty, produces the college graduate qualified and ready to take his or her place in society. The student is the raw materiaL the University through its faculty and curricula the force that shapes the resultant product. A student body is a very transient group with the great majority of those entering being on campus less than four years. For instance, at Minnesota, only 25 % of the students receive their degree in four years or with their class - another 25% receive their degree within 10 years - so eventually 50% do graduate - meaning 50% fall by the wayside for one reason or another. In such a transient and heterogenous group it is difficult to get any kind of concensus or unanimity of feeling or response - or any permanency of action. The actual voice of the stu­ dent body, therefore, is seldom ever heard - only a militant few speaking loudly as if for all. The great serious-minded students, whose only purpose is to get the best education they can in the least possible amount of time, get their degree, get out and get a job to become a part of the ongoing society. The ultimate test of the greatness of any University lies with its product - its graduates - what they do with their lives and careers, what they accomplish. This is what determines the great­ ness of a University in the mind of the community, the state, the nation, and the world. While the interest of alumni in their University is always present to some degree, it usually starts to manifest itself somewhere between 10 and 15 years after graduation. The University then starts to become important to them as they start to identify with the University, as the prestige of the University begins to rub off on to them. 8 LUM I EW Alumni power then is the influence and affluence of the graduate of a University, alumni who make the aims, purposes and progress of their Alma Mater, their aims and purposes. Informed and loyal alumni are the ones who can help their University sell its program, whether it is a program of ideas, or a building program. They are the ones who have the demonstrated and qualified experience; they are the ones who are the leaders in their community, the state and nation; they are the ones who are the leaders in their professions - willing and able to serve the cause of their University and higher education everywhere. Alumni Power is the great untapped resource of our University and like a love affair, the longer that it endures the stronger it gets. All of this has been said before - but it needs saying again - and Now. President Lotus D. Coff­ man in his inaugural address (May 13, 1921) stated that a general function of the University is to service the community and he states - "and that has been realized only as Universities have sent back to the community or the state efficient graduates. And this statement is correct. The final measure of the value of a University is the kind of service its graduates perform. The University and its graduates underwrite each other. If either decline in merit or worth to a commu­ nity, the other declines; if either grows stronger and better and serves more nobly, the other improves correspondingly." I am convinced that Minnesota Alumni stand ready for a closer partnership with the University, to aid and assist their University in its confrontation with new ideas, concepts, plans and pro­ grams in this changing society. I am convinced that the most important people to a University are its alumni. Sincerely, ~~ 4 BIG GAMES LEFT REMAINING HOME GAMES - J:30 PM BUY AT o Oct. 5 Wake Forest (M AIL SALE CLOSED) *5.50 COOKE HALL No. I PRICE I AMOUNT e Oct. 12 Illinois (HOMECOMING) *5.50

~ Nov. 2 Iowa ("M " DAY) *5.50 ORDER NOWI o Nov. 9 Purdue *5.50 (l :05 pm- DAD'S DAY) Name, Address and Zip Cod e below: AWAY GAMES 6.00 Oct. 19 Michigan State -- Oct. 26 Michigan 6.00 Nov. 16 Indiana 6.00 5.00 Make Remittance Payable to Universi ty of Minnesota Nov. 23 Wisconsin POSTAGE & HANDLING: AD D $.30 FOR EACH and mail to: Athletic Ticket Office GAME FOR WHICH TICKETS ARE ORDERED 108 Cooke Hall University of Minnesota TOTAL ENCLOSED : Minneapolis, Minn. 55455 ' INCLUDES 3% MINNESOTA SALES TAX

OCTOBER, 196 9 I 196 two m ' 11 with common origins and uncom­ mon tal nt hay I en proj ct d into th for front of pr idential politic. nd linn ota found it elf in th highl unu ual po ition of bing able to claim two of the thre lading candidat s for th D mocratic nomination. "Ind ed," as Pioneer Press ' Vashington Bur au cor- re pond nt I Ei Ie wrot in lat pril, "there are some p ople in Wa hington who wond r if ther i Minnesotans om thing in th wat r of tho 10,000 lake that mak s m n cra to b om pr sid nt." In ight y ar and a littl over four months Hub rt And The II. Humplu- y's polilicallif has rang d from th depths to th h ights. iany read rs will r m mber his p r ist­ nt efforts for th nomination b ginning a far back as Presidential 1956. Th vic presid nt, who r ceiv d his B from the University in 1939 and did gr duate work on th cam­ Race ... pu in 194~1 , initially ntered public servic as a 111 mber of th admini trativ staff of W.P. .; lat r h haded th stat divi ion. In 1943 h wa a i tant regional director of the War 1anpow r ornrnl lOn and in 1944 state campaign manag r for th Roo - v It-Truman committee. With h ry openne s dis ui ing an int ns I proud and comp titiv pirit, Hubert Humphr y b came known for fu ing the D mocratic and Farm r Labor parties into Minne ata's DFL. H wa mayor of the City of MinneaI oli from 1945 to 1948. In the latter ear h wa I cted a United tates s nator from IIinnesota. IIub rt Humphr y wa Lyndon John on' hoic a a running mat in 1964 - and th enator from IIinn­ ota becam the i presid nt of his ountry. At 56 Y ars of ag Humphre nt r d th rac for tl D m ratic pr sidential nomination on April 27, 1968, d daring him elf as thc man who could unif hi party and the nation \ ith "maturity, r traint and r pan ibility." Th l\Iinn sotal promi ed a camp ign that would "observ th absolute priOl'it of pea e ov r politi ," calling for "common ens "rath r than "fr nzi d or in­ flammatory rh tori ." H urg d Americans to look to th chall ng s of th futur rath r than to the argum nt of th pa t. IIumphr y is today's happ warri r. Hi initial­ and p rhaps most dim LIlt - task is lablishing a s pa­ rate identily apart from the Johnson administration he has s rvcd loyall y [or thr years. In a !at Jun addr ss b fore th 1innc ota tat DFL cony ntion, 1I lmphrey said that hi lif tim had 10 LU INI NEWS be n d dicat d to lib ral cau es, e p cially his 20 years as a hold r of f d ral el ctiv office. either patriotism nor lih ralism i a "short burst of motion," he stated. n Augu t 20 Vic Pr sid nt Humphrey moved a t p closer to his predil ction when he accepted the call of his party to th nomination of the U.S. pre i­ d n y. Humphr y acc pt d that nomination "knowing that th month and years ah ad wi ll everely test America's capacity to ri e to challeng ." To date his campaign ha t sted his p rsonal capacity to ri e to the chal­ leng - but a new Humphr y ha come forward, in an imag that em rged fir t in his nomination ac­ ceptance sp echo "We mu t make a moment of crisi a moment of cr ation," he said. ''\Ve stand at uch a moment nm - in the affairs of this nation - at the end of an era and at th beginning of a new da . "We hay heard hard and sometim s bitter debate. Thi d bate is th e work of a fre p opl , the work of an open convention, th work of a political party r - pon iv to th n d of a nation. "Democrac afford d bate, di cus ion and di sent, but it al 0 requires decision. " cro s m rica - throughout th \ orld - we hear fr dom' ri ing choru : 'Let m live m own life. Let me Iiv in p ace. Let me be free!' "It will be an wered in how \ fac th three reali­ tie that confront this nation. "Th fir t reality i th nec ssity for peace in iet­ nam and in th world. The econd reality is th nece­ it for peace in our citi and in our nation. Th third r alit i th nece ity for unity in our party. Senator Eugene 1. McCarthy' 39 "L t those who beIi v that om cau e in i tnam ha b en right - and tho e who belie e it ha been wrong - agre h re now: neither vindication nor repu­ diation will bring peac or b worthy of om country. E . Ellcren ~I earthy ' 39~1 faced down an old " leam hile, as a citiz n, candidate and vice pr 'i­ friend from l\Iinne ota 'when he met ice President d nt, I shall do v r thing in my power to aid the Humphre in the 19 Democratic pr idential nomina­ n gotiations in Paris. tions rac. IcCru·th , declar d in late 1967 that he "If th re is one lesson \ e should ha learned it i would eek the nomination a an anti-\ ar candidate. that th polici of tomorrm ne d not be limited b Throucrhout hi campaign lcCarth retained that the polici of ye terday. If I am Pr ident, I hall appl quality which the lat dlai t Yen on attributed to that lesson to the earch for p ace in ietnarn, a to him: an eloquent r pre ntati\'e of " ,hat i crood in other area of national polic . m rican life. "In 1960 - and again in 1964 - ou, nd thoucrh h 10 t in hi bid the nator maintain P opl ga u a mandat to awak n a publi philo oph that i ' a thoroll hI. di ciplined unm t n ds. You a k d u to g t m rica movincr xamination of th relicrioll and political po tulate of again. nd we ha e. 'V ha . awakened xp ctations. our democratic ociet n ith l' embarra d nor dic­ , ha rai ed a n w standard of Iif in Am rica . . . tatorial in hi liberali in. Th foIlo\\'incr are ome of hi "Om most urg nt hall nge i in urban merica. remark aft r the conclu ion of th 19 Urban cong tion has not onl rea ted a compl x of cony ntion: n w pI' bl m , it ha multipli d and inten iBed th probl ms of rac , of po rt , rim , hung r, d pair. "Th imp] olution of th frustrat d and the fricrht- n d i to la h out acrainst . 0 iet . ' kno\ - and th mu t kno\ - that lhi i no an wer. " 0 man in lh '''hit HOlls - or at an I of cro -

ontinu dOll pag 23)

OCTOBER, 196 11 to face up to before we took it to the people: namel that in th midst of this war they were willing to Harold E. Stassen' 29LLB say that we were wrong and that the policy ought to THE photo below is on of 1inn ota's outhful thr - be. changed. That was the judgm nt of the p ople of tim gov rnor. Harold E. tass n '27B '29LLB, pi - ~hl countr ~. But we got stuck along the way in try­ tur d on campaign lit ratur in hi s initial bid for th mg to put It through what we

Walk Right In • • • Whether you live in the Twin Cities or out of town, you'll be proud to walk in the daor of the University of Minnesota Alumni Club. With its convenient location off the lobby of the Sheraton·Ritz Hotel, it's a perfect place to come for cocktails with friends before or ofter footboll games, the theatre, symphony - or for privote parties, business meetings, banquets - or just leisurely dining. The food and service are deluxe, and the location of the club puts you right in the center of everything going on in the Twin Cities.

Apply for your membership card now - initiation fee will be waived during the 60-day period ending December 1, 1968.

~------, THE UNIV ERSITY OF MINNESOTA ALUMNI CLUB 205 Coffma n Memorial Union, University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. 55455

I hereby apply for a Resident ($36.00 dues) , or a Non-resident ($10.00 dues) membership in the University of Minnesota Alumni Club. I understand that the initiation fee of $20.00 will be waived if my applica tian is received prior to December 1, 1968.

My check is enclosed for $ . I am naw a member of the Alumni Association: Yes __ No__ (If you are nat a member, send $10.00 additional for annual membership dues .> 315 Nicollet Name______On The Mall Home Add ress, ______

Ci ty ______Zone ______

Seria I N u mber______------13 T HROUGH th se open doors and thin wall com th conv rsation , th r arch and th ab orbed x­ it ment that today i ital to man and his capacity to urviv on thi plan t. It is here that you h ar about th mol cular basis for genetic d fects in childr n and sickle lls anemia. It is her that you s e the modifications of cellular surfac origins that might enh nc wound haling, facilitate drug ab orption or hind r viru p netration. It is her that you learn the basics ess ntial for the THE DOORS control of pollution, for th pres rvation of natural ar as and wildlife, for d cision and jurisdiction in the use of insecticid s, herbicid s and pesticides. ARE OPEN, This is th olleg of Biological Sciences where, ac- cording to its dean, Richard S. Caldecott, a principal THE WALLS job is to teach ba ic bio ci nee that allows agricultural and m di al p ople or ngin ers to handle their voca­ tional mission, to becom knowingly involved in the ARE THIN problems of human relationship. you walk through the department laboratorie and ee their p opl at work, as the Alumni ews did, you f el that something is happening, naturally and for the future - as it should. Th facilitie are crowded, filled with the glasswar and quipment of the biolo­ gi t, Y t the work goes on - int nsely, with congenial interchang and always with purpose. Over 25 y ars ago a r volution b gan in biology that today pre ents a new biology, and with it coming a chall nge to unive sities all ov r th country as they grope and work to defin and form a t aching-r arch system ad quat to handle th r volution. The Univer­ sity of Minn ota took up this chall ng initially in 1960, through th !fort of it vic pr sid nt for aca­ d mic ad mini tration. Th Univ r ity was not doing the mo t .II cti job it could with biolog . D partm nts w re scatt r d and introspective; th I' wa a growing redundan in cour work. nd, more importantly, those who taught and work d in rear h f It a growing ne d to maintain identity with their fi ld. In 1963 administrative d cision no long r pI' vail d; hange wa no longer a threat. Vi e President William C. Sheph I'd d cid d something had to b don. "H moved it off d ad center wh n it had almo t come to a halt," D an Caldecott aid. A University committ composed of tho e depart­ m nts having biologists m t and discu d - often heat- The College of dly - th probl m. A group of out id on ultant of the nation's di tinguished s inti ts w r call din. Th Biological Sciences answ r: a formal organization for biology whos r­ spol1sibility it was to unify all of th basic bio i 11 S teaching in the Univ l' ity and aloha r Ion ibility for developing x ellen e at the graduate I v 1. In 1965 th "polygamous malTiag of the physicist, th physical ch mist, th biochemi t, the genetici t and th morphologist, with another clas of individual who imply pr [1' to be all d a biologist" happ n d. Th Univ rsity I' at d the 011 ge of Biological i nces ( BS). 14 ALUMNI NEWS B wa th first of it kind in lh nation - creat d in an almosph re of forthright action. Without guide­ lin s, without mod Is to follow, " BS ran by th seat of its pants," aId cott said. entral administration back d BS all the way. The fin coop ration of all tb dans invol ed with th d partm nt and p rsonn I that n eded to be trans- f ned mad BS possibl . Through it growing y ars the oIl ge's problems ha not b en those of per onality nor of intercollegi­ ate rivalry. "It is a credit to all concern d that toda th r mark I hear mo toft n is 'what can we do to help,'" aldecott ha remark d. Initially the 011 ge of gricultur 's departm nt of biochemistry and LA's department of botany and zoolog w re transferred to CB . And in 1965 a d partment of g netics was formed by th voluntary tran fer of faculty from agriculture and lh d partm nt of zoology. ccording to aldecott, thi formation was "quit a tribute to Dean herwood . B rg of the 011 ge of Agriculture." oon a nuel i of faculty moved into Gortner Hall on the t. Paul campu . Their intellectual interest w re clo to tho e of the gen tici t alread residing in that building, and a departm nt of genetic and cell biology form d. B grew up in t. Paul becau e the niver ity ad­ mini tr, tion want d to mak more effective use of that campu , and becau e biology v a needed equally on both ampu e . Y t its total r idence is not in t. Paul. 'hen B wa ' on year old its d partm nt of ecolo and b ha iOTal biology "a et up and i currentl hou d in the Iu eum of atural Hi tor , linneapoli. Th n \ d partm nt' mi sion i to tach and preach on ern for th ill" ivaI of th entir co v tern of \ hicb man i a part, according to it head. . Th linn apoli -10 at d zo logy d partment and t\IlI eum of ahual History ar both attach d to CB , a ar variou bioscience faclllt who e academic con­ cern r lat elo el to th medical chool. B has join d the basic biological ci nce teachincr of the niv rsity and r ach d into tho ar as of th 11 \ biology tllat ar vital to man and hi \ ell-b in cr. It ha al 0 - and importantl - bridg d th crap be- tw n th t. Paul and Iinneapoli campu e . Th ColI ge offer all of tl1 ba i hio cien t ach­ ing for thc medical chool a \ ell a for tll agri ultmal and terinar school , in addition to r archincr in ba i biological ci n in it own right. "In a ry f w y ar th tudent" ho wi he to g t a B or B in biology an hoo e hi ampu. Toda many student want to tak las \ ork in t. Paul b - cause th find it 1 crO\ d d," aId ott aid. B has stabli h d an und rgraduat or mricll­ lum that i u eabl b a liberal art or a profe ionall ori nted stud nt. T da it fa ulti ha la sroom onta l \ ith 1 of th . ni r it' tud nt bod . With proper fa iliti s, th Dumb r \V uld qui kl doubl. "\ put a much mpha i on und rgraduate train­ ing, a graduat trainincr," aIde ott aid. "Our fa -

CTOBER, 1968 15 ulty are all committ d to it. Those teaching the 6000 To all iat diffi cultie in con muni ation that an student in biology 1 and 2 are all ither a 'ociat or fu ll r suIt from a plit campus, aId cott has peciall profes or . Some of th m ar our mo t distingui hed ask d for a clo d-circuit TV sy t m linking a . minar research er . room in St. Paul with anoth r in linn apolis. Th r "If we are going to have fir t clas biology you m ust faculty could during lunch or at oth r ti m s talk h - have your first cla s peopl teaching it." twe n campuse . Or a stud nt minar p a1.er in ~I ill­ Int rdepartmental and intercollegiate graduate pro­ n apoli ould be pick d up in t. Paul. r g u tion. grams, in addition to its own, have also b en et up could b ask d ba k and forth - to mak full tl of all by th CoIl ge - notably in cell biology and cology fa iliti sand p rsonn 1. and behavioral biology. Through these CBS ha be­ Thu far Cald cott feel that th unif ing of biosci­ come th focal pOint for getting things don I ence teaching has impro d th quality and ha a\' d F ederal funding of graduat r search and training th University a fortun - in fa ulty tim and mone . upport is characteristic of th nthusiasm for the n \V Ho\ ev r, while r asonably ad quat r ourc wer CoIl g . 111 total have in rea ed from $901 ,337 in given for faculty acquisition, th re i no pa e in whi h 1965-66 to $1,744,6.38 in 1968-69. to put them. Particularl in linncapolis aldecotl

Yet a relatively small faculty is carrying a large find the situation d sperat . "The bot n and Z o]og 1 t aching burden a t very 1 v 1. "Vhy? B cau thes departm nt hav unb Ii abl criminal quarter ," h p eopl "ver "intcns ly interest d and had faith that said. faciliti s would b forthcoming," aId cott said. "111 In t. Paul, Snyd l' Hall wa reno ate 1 and a part faculty have increas d th ir t a hing load and under­ of it hous th g n ti s and II biolog departm nt. taken new r s arch and training programs in re pon e Th remaind rio cupi d b the In titute of T h­ to the challeng s with w bich tb y w r pres nted." nology for th t aching of organi and g 11 ral chem­ D spite stiff competition, CB i drawing good peo­ ish'y, Th new Gortn r Laborator , whi h joins nyder, ple to its rank ; tb Row from Minne ota to the coasts holds the biophysicist . has b en r v r ed in CB . In its current I gi Iati v r quests B is eeking a Advancement jn th ollege is bas don thr it m , 11 w building in t. Paul - to house th b tan and g - Cald cott remark d - t aching, res arch and int m al 11 ties and cell biology d partm nt . Th 11 th aeat d s rvic . "I've b n adamant in tIling our faculty that nyd r Hall spa will b us d larg I f r t a hing, tb a ttitud you hav to take jf you want to succe d el etron micro op faciliti s and th pansi Il of th is to k ep your door op n and your d p artm nt wall biochemistr fa ulty. thin. man in any p art of th niv rsity who has an This n w bios i nc s nt r is planned to adjoin int r st in biosci n h as a plac to com now, a plac Snyd r Hall. B ' thrc buildings \. ill be ontiguous. to t ach or to r s ar h, a plac wh r h h as a hom "w will stratify our fa ult on th flo I'S of th s among sp cialists." buildings s th at w will ha e th kind f peopl in 16 L M I E TlI E EXCII 'CE of ideas alld common problem-soldng illl:olr;e all memb r. in Ihe elIDol of Biological ci nc . H re Dr. Lar;ell M. Render on, I! ad of the bio­ chellliltry d epar/m nt, at left, \V. Crady mitl!, a post-doctorate; fellow, and Abraham Be.lrot, a graduate ·tudent, di cus a matter of equal importance to all.

genetic., in botany and in bioch mi tr, proximal to on another who are lik I to intera t mo t often," aId cott aid. "This will 'ncoura ma-..:imum inter- chan in regard to r earch problem and enable mmon u of many e 'pen i fa iliti ." Th bUilding will allow th fa lilt row to 60 over a period of ar - providing th p r onn 1 n ee - sar)' to r a h a lara r and one rned 011 ge g n ration. In :\Iinn apoli ,th new addition to the ehemi tr building now unci r eonstru tion will fr aluable I a in tb Zoolog building for laborator tea bing and resear h fa iIi tie needed to accommodat th growing tud nt population. Tbu' B has mad 1971 building requ t to eomplet the front and put an addition on to th Zoology building. \ hen fini h d th building' worth will be 5 million. During 1973 th olleg th need for a n w colog , and b havioral ei n building proximal to the Iu ('llin of atural Hi tory. t 'ompl tion, the ph , i <11 plants in ~[il1l eapolis will equal thos in l. Paul and allow r ali ti distribution of faculty and tud nts, both in the prof sinal chool and in the lib ral art program. THE DIFFERENT i;::es of Junior cicntit l'C "I want t the 011 ae r all e'\ 'el in two m' a ," Bra kerud' tu..' o mice dramatically how the re ilt of aid ott said." ncl th yar a wid apart a th pol B ' xperim nl in clectiec [}T ccdinC1. Thi r arch Ira The ollege an cl elop abs lut x 11 nand b - practical applicatioll to the br cding of lorg r a11imal . 'on (' th 11< tional ent r for behavi ral biology. The work began in 195 lind r III direction of Dr. Ralph "E 010 , which i th stud , f man and tll' plac ~ E. olll\lock. pproximatcly -lOa litt r of mice arc born (COIl/illl/cd on pagc _3) each year, tumillet four gcneration . o TOBER,196 17 MINNESOTA HIGHER EDUCATION AND THE PRIORITIES RACE

The 1969 educational budget proposals are drawn. The race for the monies is on between the University, state colleges and junior colleges. Does Minnesota have adequate resources to support the level of education it has promised its children? Money is scarce, particularly with the present cutbacks in federal aid to education. Many budgets are catch-up budgets. Where should the state monies go? How should they be divided? The local press has carried stories on the prioritie race. Comments and criticism come from University, state and junior college personneL The Alumni News contacted three men who have been publicly vocaL The following pages carry the remarks of • University Vice President Stanley J. Wenberg • State College Chancellor G. Theodore Mitau • Peter S. Popovich, former legislator and current member of the State College Board and the Minnesota Com­ mission on Higher Education These men are concerned. They prai e and quarrel with our college systems. As Minnesota alumni, are you concerned? Where would you put your support for the legislative monie ? 18 LU ifNI EWS "What we need are efJe five and re ponsible alternatives a we seek to lise our state's resources to get the job done."* - Stanley 1. Wenberg, University Vice President for Educa­ tional Relationships and Development

F R tanl y W nberg our gr at t n ds now, and for the n xt d cad , ar at th upp r and low rend of th high r ducational sp ctrum. "The junior colleg must becom an attractive, effec­ tive altemativ to entering high r du alion at a de­ gr e-granting in titution. Th upp r nd, which we have worked very hard to build, must b markedly strengthen d at the ni er ity and at th tate col­ leg s. Meanwhil exi ting upper di ision programs mu t get the resource th y n d and which they till do not hav ." Th impact of 1innesota's growing junior college ),st m has y t to b fully felt, but its importance is certain. Currently 0% of the junior college population i in the niver ity and in th tate college. This i over one-half of the student total for the campuse. Junior colleg emollrnent i timated to row another 75%by 2000. By that arne ear, graduate tudy is projected to a 40 incr as. nd both the niv rsity and tat col­ I g stem mu t ha e markedl increa ed funding upport to handl this gro\ tho \ nberg' an w r to the bulging nrollment in­ crea e in lower division and graduate v ork i stu­ d nt redeplo ment. If uch a hifting of stud nt population i possible, h f el that "the ni r ity in 01 ement in lower di­ vision work will b come a declining percentage of om a ignment. Th arne ould r w 1I b true in the tat coil g . .. s a dir ct re lilt, the co t-p r- tudent in ach \vill incr a e. },Ieanwhile the niv r, it prof s ional col­ I g must b xpand d." II not d that duplication of our profe ional \ ould not onl re ult in taggering 0 t to th tate in moni s, but also in the qualit of du ation. on qu ntl the role of th junior 011 g in Iin­ nesota i siO'nificant. nel \V nberg ha str ed that "if w pr ad our r 0 Irce too thinly to re pond to all pres ur ,w run th risk of din1ini hinO' our ability to do ound two- ear terminal program ." )' tern that an offer onl, g 11 ral ducation, it I a t "It i' n t l' ponsibl to -trapolat upp r division expen iv program:' nrollment in an ab olute lin on th ba i of pr ent nd what of the upper divi ion, who projected e-..:peri n \ ith junior coll g el1l'ollm nt ," h aid. growth by 20 i 40%. In Wenb rg's ye thi ector al 0 " ound two- ar terminal g 11 ral ducation and tech­ requi.r critical fund to eolar and ophi. ticate it nical program will in me a gr at r olume of ucce s­ d partm ot ",hi! forrninO' a mod rn alliance with ful two- I ar graduate who will nter th labor market, omput r utilization clo d cir uit tel vi ion pro­ not tran f r. But inad quat funding, that tar th grammed I aminO' r nrce and in r a inglv compli- junior coll g program will in nre p 11)etuation of a "'at d 1 arnin~ la boratorie . ~ , "This article i adapt d from omm nls mad by \,i e "For thi work, librarv and laboratory re Our e are PI' ident v nberg before overnor nderson's ub om­ I arl ' mor xp n i\'e ' and mor extei1 i\' ," h aid. milt of the finn ola Higher Educalion oordinating " n ad quat upper divi ion pro ram hould b a­ nll ur dr ' tud nt in a publi d gr pro ram and we o TOBER, 1968 19 ""hoI heali dly ndors the state coll ge plea that thi "The newspapers lVere incorrect when the b ~ccomplished at th six xisting coli ge . Only by havmg trong undergraduate programs can they ever reported that I had made a proposal that hope to hare the graduate load." UMD and Morris should go under the tate Check the pr sent building program r quest and you see that th I gislatur ahead fac a tough s sion. college ystem and that Waseca /zould go ~h junior olleg ystem asks approximately $25 mil­ under the junior ollege systel71."- Peter S. hon, the tat colleg $50 million top priority, and th e niversity 100 million. Most of thes moni s will go Popovi 11 for catch-up - not n w programs. nd health cienc expansion n eds currently ar $55 million, with a re­ quest for $14 million in th coming legislative s sion. . Has Minnesota edu ation suffer d from poor plan­ HE rai ed a qu stion at a Iinne ota High r Edu­ nmg? Wenb rg think not. "On all fronts th r has ation onunis ion h aril g in '\iVa ca, con ned to b en a time lag in appropriations to ke p pa with d t rmine and review th Reg nts' fe lin gs as to what the problem," he aid. bould happ n to Was ea pursuant to a I gi lati Thus h feels that it i n ith r conomically nor directi e. Popovich wa 110t a memb T of that com­ politically, feasible for the state to construct additional mittee. baccalaur at colleg s as a first priority at this tim - "I ha no obj tion to th ' tran f r of "Va eca from or in the n xt decade. "A n \V four- ear coll g is a an a<1ric ultural chool to the ne, purposes that were quick and comfortable answer if r sources w l' no bing suggested," he aid. Popovich qu tioned th problem - and great pr ssure does exi t," , en berg pa sag of a r olution that might hamp r th tran f I' said. "But our own building lag demonstrates that re- of Wa eca to a different governing board should th ources ar limited." ornmis ion's studi indicate such. , ew devices to test need an and hould be tri d. sal' ult of his COmm nt, which wa field d b th Ware working with the stat and junior co ll ge - ommitt for di u ion, a ubdi ision to th r olu­ and will be working with th privat co lI ges of the tion was pass d which stated," othing in this action area - on an extension center in Roche ter that ,viB prejudic th futur pos ibilit of I' comm ndation use existing facilities." from this ommis ion r garding the futur stru tur 'With stud nt r d ploym nt th ni ersity will as- of hi gh r dllcation in finn sota. It i re ognized that ume "controlled growth," an attitud that ha been orne flltur recomm ndation ma propo th as ign­ gr atly misund r tood, according to W nb rg. m nt of th 'a a T chnical Program and f, ciliti The Univ rsity int nd that "controlled growth ' will to anoth r governing board." h "geared to support other syst ms of ducation, not 'Va eca is CUlT ntl under th e jurisdiction f th undercut them by aiming only at high ability stud nts; niversity. to maintaining a strong undergraduate program, par­ When th lumni ,s asked him' h h thought ticularly for stud nts with a firm career choic r lat d s1 ould gov rn Wa eca, Popovich , aid th at h 'aw to these offerings; and to th highe t po sib] I vel of three alternativ s a to governing I oards for hi gh r utilization of its resource b cause of th ir exten ive education. Th fir t -, hich h favors - \Va. a tate and highly specialized natur ." olleg and JlInior olleg Board m rg I' to eIT ct With such "controlled growth," stud nts wishing to ontrol ov r a singl , combined . stem, join d on transfer into the UniverSity, or b tween coIl ges within th Minnesota Higher Edll ation ommis ion b th the University, hall be treat d alike. niver ity' Board of R g nts and oth r educational The coming conc ntration of graduate study, re­ groups. search and advanc d profeSS ional education will alter PopOvich Fe Is that th e obj ctive of lh stat and the structure of stud nt population on th T, in Cities junior call g systems 0 compl men t each oth r that campus, reducing proportionat ly enrollmen ts in th th y hOllld b join d. nd h also think that th lower divi ion. Howev r, th e Univ r ity doe not in­ Minnesota High l' Education ommi. sion should b tend to pha out nor sharply urtail undergraduat sb' ngth n d. education. Th se ond alt rnativ would b th creation of a The campus will maintain a Full program of studi s up r Board to r gulate high r dllcation. llch in both divisions to m et stat in tructional n eds, boards, op rating in other tat s, ha e nol worked maintain graduat instructional and res arch int rac­ well, h m ntion d. nd th third option , auld be tion, offer those highly sp cia li z d und rgraduat pro­ maintaining th tatu quo - h r ,in Popo i h se grams not available 1 wher, and continue th study th niv rsity's Board of R gents b oming a L1per and development ne ded b tw n low r division tudy Board which could p ramid power . 0 as to b harmful and upper division profeSSional programs. to high r ducation. If priority in admittanc xi t5, upp r divisiol stu­ Popovi h, who s rv d in th e I gis!atllr ' appropria­ d nts will T ceiv it. The multipliCity of sp ialLie in tions cornmitt for 10 y ars, today is on th e other sid the Univ rsity's und rgraduat programs would off r of th tabl - with th Stal oil g Board. them the great r advantag "If ou ask a p n trating q I sti n, it 10 n't m an 20 LU IN! NEW r ity faculties et up the program through which a joint d gree is given." the junior colleges grow, PopOvich anticipates a probl m in the of tudents who finish the two-program. " 11 of them are not goine; to quit at the nd of two years - where do they go?" he asked. "I ub cribe to th theory that we ought to create a stat college in the m tropolitan area; not a graduate chool or a professional chool or a univer it)', but one that will tak care of junior, seniors and fifth-vear tudents. . "I think that the legi latur ou ht to e tablish it next e ion. There's no doubt in m mind that b 1975 we'r going to be short of pace and badly short of it." The r ciprocal agreements with out-of-state chools, uch a the " 'isconsin Reciprocal agreement, will not ea th tudent population crush, Popovich noted. "The finne ota tat College y tern ha fallen be­ hind th tate college that they're compared to in ~Iichi an, Illinoi , \ i con in and Iowa," he aid. The la t Ie i lative se ion wa a breaI...-throu h e ion for th \' tern, but one breakthrou h will not allow them to catch up. "Th tati tics ho\ that prior to 1961-62 the amount of mone pent per tudent in the ~linne ota tate collee;e \Va much higher than it i toda.. in view of our comparisons," he aid. '·,,'hen you look at th level and alaries of our fa ult)', you can ee wh, the good one don't come h re, and why we 10 e many of the O'ood one once we t them," . -' Popovi h find that the tate colleO'e mu t ti hten th ir prof ional recruitment, a uring them elve ) ou'r a ain t om thinO'," h aid, recalling anti- initially of good faculty and enforcina merit evalua­ ni\'er it a cu ations mad again t him. "I think the tion on ala~ie. I '<1i lators hav a right to a k. Th burden of proof i .. om of our metropolitan public chool pay more on tho wh are a king for th mon ., to their teacher than \ hat the junior college are able Popovich, naming nonparticipation as a major fac- to," he aid. nd th have to compete~ with them ulty problem, fe I that om ni r it)' per onnel and th tate colle e for per onne!." find it too a to it back and criti iz wh n the Popod h eli like putting up building ju t for the ought to b at th tat apitol workinO' with th ak of building. "We hould b utilizing our buildin 1 gi lator . mol' ," he aid. '1 ee nothina "Tong "ith ha,,;ng lat In e aluating th mi ion of the tat 011 ge, he i afternoon and evening cIa e for our reaular faculty." d pI cone rn d 'about the movem nt, parti ularl), 'In our . tern w 're going to do more toward th b hamb l' of omm rc , to make om tate coli g com pI t utilization of bUilding pac durin more int uni er iti ." hour of the day." The tate 011 g Board ha hir d " f. po ition i that we ought to go 10\ ," Pop vich a vi e hanc lIor to make a y t m analy i of build­ said, "in l' ating an th r uni r it)' of linn ota. Th ing u . st of Ollr ducation ar t1' m ndoll ; I would not Popovi h e a major priority for the :' t m to b want to se two uni r iti 0 omp titivc f r th ta,' Iibrar)' facilitie . h\ e're woefully inad quat ," h 'aid. dollar that th '1' both ufferinO'." H al 0 mentioned the nec it" for civil en'ice Th I gi lature has gi en th tat I er onn 1 to fr e facult.' for fuji-time prof . ional to grant do t ral d gr . "Th I ition of my If, and elutie , a better retir III nt s)' tem, < nel, four. th I knO\ oth r m mb r of th Board i that w 'r not big on - fa ilitie . going into a do toral program \ h r th d gre from "I think the futur look good for th stat coIl g . th ix tat ]) g 0' t to be lik ti su par 1'." The w r t thing that ould happ n "ould b if th "\ fa or th xplorati n that i ' goinp; on for a varion. unit of high r educati 11 tart d to J...'Ilock j int pI' ram, a that b twe n t. loud, ~Ic nkat ea h oth r down in th £ ht f l' th moni ," h aid. and th niv l' it)', wh r om fa ulli and th ni- uch a fmca ould. b avoid 1 with tronO' correla-

TOBER, 1968 ~1 tion and coop ration among the uniLs. d ' nt Lo apply his cducati n L th b ne6L of com­ "I'm utterly convinced," Popovich said, "that th munity and family." rank and file faculty member at the University, so in­ A spirit of internation alism should al 0 b built. volved with his own problems and work, has nearly 'There is a particular obligation in th Middl ' Ves t to forgotten, more than incidentally, that there are six se th at our education ha a s n itivi t to and an good state colleges around the state that want to get awarenes of int rnational omplication ," he said. b tt 1'. nd, finally, llitau anticipates som exciting exp ri­ mental \. ork in the th or of du ation at th e tate colI g I vel. "W are planning to tak a look at th "Being a state of medium, wealth, as we are, laboratory scho Is," he not d. n integrated laboratory chool might be set up in on of th colleg s to serv Minnesota must learn to use its academic re­ th entire ys tem, and to coop rate with th e niver­ sources in a very careful way, avoiding sity. tat coIl g budg t 1'equ t for th 1969 ses ion duplication and inefficiency wherever pos­ app ar high - a 90% increase in op rating monie and sible." - G. Theodore Mitau a 111% increa e in bUilding monies. But th e ystem must ab orb thl' to four times as many stud nts as it ha now in the n xt biennium - and catch up. Th r D R. Mitau, chancellor of r"Iinnesota' state 011 ges, are hlmdl'eds of pro£e or to b hired; a building pro­ es the junior colleges, state coll g s and the Univer­ gram to update; staff almes to rais to comp titi\' sity as parts of the total spectrum of higher ducation. and comparativ 1 vels; laboratory equipment and The junior college will increa ingly handl the fir t re earch fa ciliti . to mod rnize, and librari s to stock and second years for the total, he feels, wi.th the state adequately. colleges carrying heavy enrollments in the junior­ "This is a catch-up budget to redress the failures of senior years and the Master of Education 1 vels, and previous 1 gislatu1'e ," Mitau said. "It is not that th the University concentrating Horts in its profes ional legislators wer not willing, but th at th r ource schools. wer not availabl and th growth pattel'11 was 0 er­ Mitau has four emphatic goals for the tystem he wh lming." heads with a new and amazingly qualiE d staff, work­ Ten year ago th l' \ er 7,000 tudent in th tate ing in what he terms a "missionary effort." Initially, he would like to ee the common market approach d velop in the sy tem, "where it would be possible for th stat colleg s to develop unique per­ sonaliti s in curricular emphasis and pecialization ." It has taken time - and effort - for these colleges to shed their second-class citizen imag ry. ow, und l' a strong central office, they look at th emselves as a total system, int nded to reinforce and servic on anoth r. Until very recently they were individual insti­ tutions; their legislative presentations wer often con­ fused and ill-pI' pared; and the m tropolitan legiS­ lators were not always ympath tic with their aims. Dr. Mitau told the Alumni ew that the system is now coming to understand a need for fl. xibility. "We do not have the funds in th state," he said, "to replicate ev ry deparhnent in very one of the six tate colleges." It is more l' asonabl , h fe Is, to allo­ cate resources to a sys t m with a high mohiliL'}' of stud nts and pOSS ibly, of faculty. The common market approach would also alleviate som e of the dropout rate, a great los to th e state financially, in term of educati on. A student might have a second chance in anoth r institution, showing ability and int r t. S ondly, Mitau would lik to see th coll eges d velop a consort of public servic . Two-thirds of our teach 1's in Minnesota graduat from outstat coIl ges. These institutions ar "clo to th people and cut a ross the ntir sp ch'um of Am rican liE ," Mi tau said, "thus offering a uniqu opportunity for th tu- 22 LU 1 I EW coli ge sy'tern. Today th r ar 30,000. It i stirnated Biological Science , continued in v n year that th r will be 50,000. major campaign is in ord r in inne ota," Mitau where all organisms live, is of paramount importance said, « 0 that tb p opl of the state will realize that to man' future. The affairs of this nation and of th ducational y tern ne ds a hot in the arm." He this world are going to be very clo ely tied to the finds this particularly nee sary if the brain-drain on problems of pollution and how we take care of human th tat i to b rev rs d, and if we ar to attract wastes. those industries that have a high ne d for train d in­ "These probl ms cannot be olved without having t lligence and skilled labor. the basic information about life ancl how organi ms 1itau finds con iderabl support for hi pro rams interact with on another." from tud nt populations and from tho e young peopl econdl aldecott want to see a trone; molecular committed to locate in Minnesota communitie . They re earch approach to the problems of organism de­ realize that education is not cheap, but that faciliti s velopment. mu t be upgraded to off r the kind of education "\ e ha e had a period of molecular biology where need d to compete effecti ely. w have d scribed the con tituent of cell ," he aid. "The state can handle the budget reque t for the " ow we're reaching the point where \ e know how junior colleges, tate coll ges and the University, pro­ these constitu nts function in makina cells. oon we vided two things are done," Mitau aid. "The governor will need to l'IloW what happen when t\: 0 or thre and the leaislature mu t agr e to make Iinne ota's or more cell get together. education the number one priorit in the upcoming "In all of our departments we mu t have excellent se ion, continuing the spirit of 1967, and the thre faculty doin excellent re earch in the way organi m major gments of higher education mu t cooperate a function, from their molecular con tituents up to their th never have before!" entire development. s to his feelings concerning a metropolitan state "If we had a goal for the future it would be to keep college, Iitau noted that the tate college stem the kinds of intellects around here who could really would alwa s b an out tate s stem un Ie s it wa able come to grip with the e problem ." to a um it obligation of erving the en-county And - we might add -, ho can come to grips with m tropolitan area which includes 60% of the tate' the stud nt eking knowledge nece ar)' for on oing population. solution to ocietal probl m . "Between 1973-74th r will b between 12,000 to 13, oung peopl eeking ntrance to upper level Humphrey continued education in the m tropolitan area," he aid. t. ernment - can hru the immediate respon ibility of loud, , hich currentl dra\J 2,500 from the city guaranteeing to e"ery American the right to per onal ar a cannot grov indefinite! . In :Bve ear the tate ecurity. will fac a backup of ix to s en thou and tudent, "I put it blunt] : riotina, burn ina, nipin , muagin h tres ed. traffic in narcotic and di r gard for th law are the metropolitan tate college, ill rend r a ervice advance guard of anarchy - and they mu t b topped. to the metropolitan area and to its youn peopl ,ho The an wer lie in rea oned, effective action by th want to go into upp r di i ion college \ ork," he aid. tate, local and federal authority. I pI d to u e every "Thi typ of coll ge \ ill b particular! u eful to r ource available to th Pre id nt to end the fear r r ons who want mor general types of education, in in our ci tie . th humanitie, social sci nce and t ching." ,., mu t r tore our pre ent citie and w mu t Her again, the k ,ord i cooperation. ~Iitau do bring pro perit and opportunity to our rural areas. not want a truggle nor onSi t to de elop , ith the But w mu t al 0 move b yond th enc!o ure of our ni er ity. H ees th m tro tate coIl gab ina traditional citie to creat ~ w citie . " 'e mu t de ian ti d to th total ducational pictur , and con ei abl an op n America op ning new opportunitie in open dev loping om ne d d xp rimentation in inter­ land. di ciplinary and inter-departmental work -, ith the "The third r ality i th nece it, for unity in our niv r ity. country. I tak m tand. Th coming doctoral program of the stat colle e , ,." e are and we mu t b one nation. und rod, 1itau n ision ,ar a manifestation of th \ a Hn- unit d b lib rty and ju tic for all. ne ota can off r more PhD program without having '1 cho not impl r to run for Pr id nt. I e k to in titution giving doctorat who are inad quatel 1 ad a nation. quipp d to clo o. "I would lik to u d v lop a '1 ba e m ntire candidacy on th b li f - which jOint program \ ith th niver it " h aid. ome from th d pth of my 'oul- that the merican Thi will t< k time. Y t h i connd nt and opti­ I ople will tand up for ju tic and fair play, they will mi ti that a rea onabl do toral program an b had. r spond to a all for on citizen hip - op n tall." Thi tat oIl g han llor f I that ducation in Hubert Humphr . carri forth hi ampaign todav 'linnesota an move ah ad, "'f, all work toaeth r for the high t om in thi land, in hi e'\ub r ~ nt pirh to nfor ch oth r' fun tion and rol s." of optimi m and hop . a TOBER, 1968 23 Secretary FLORENCE M. LEHMANN '23BA Minneapolis, Minnesota In her 17th year as a member of the Minneapolis School Board

First Vice President JAMES A. WATSON '42BA Minneapolis, Minnesota President of Red Owl Stores, Hopkins

Treasurer WALLACE l. BOSS '28BSBus St. Paul, Minnesota Senior Vice President of 9th Federal Reserve Bank, SI. Paul

Past Pres ident ALBERT H. HEIMBACH '42BBA Minneapolis, Minnesota Vice President of Farmers & Mechanics President Bank, Minneapolis KENNETH C. GLASER '42BBA Minnetonka, Minnesota President of Lend Lease Transportation Second Vice Pre'Si dent Company, Minneapolis HARRY HELTZER '33METE St. Paul, Minnesota President & Director of Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company, St. Paul

24 Boord Member J. ROSCOE FURBER '24EE Minneapolis, Minnesota Vice President & Manager of the Min­ neapolis Division of Northern States Power Company Boord Member RICHARD E. KYLE, SR. '27LLB White Bear Lake, Minnesota Attorney-at-Low, St. Paul

Boord Member OSCAR R. KNUTSON '27LLB St. Paul, Minnesota Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court

Boord Member HOWARD F. WOO '27BA '31 BArch Minneapolis, Minnesota Retired businessman

Boord Member MAYNARD A. SPEECE '43BSAgEd Minneapolis, Minnesota Form Service Director for WCCO Radio, Minneapolis

Boord Member ono W . QUALE '40BAJourn Edina, Minnesota Executive Director of Associated Col­ legiate Press, University of Minne­ sota

25 U IQ E opportunity put John ott '34B h mE a pa apart from his cont mporaries. A a ch mical company ' cuti , h ha WE et up a brand 11 w company from ratch and brought it to full maturity. In 1952 parent Sinclair P trochemicals gave thi chi f ex cutiv KNOW officer-board chairman of Sinclair Petroch mi als, In . and director of Sin lair Oil Corporation, a chart r to s t up a ch mical bu in s. At .6rst Sinclair Petrochemicals wa littl more than John Scott's THEM office. Now -15 years later - the company is in r sin , intermediates, solvents, pIa tics and f rtilizer . In 1967 sa le reached $125 million; by 1970, wh n veral more plants will b compl ted, sales should reach $225 million. Scott, a the man in charg , has b n a mark t res archer able to put his company' money wher his projections are. In early May hi succes '\ a r cognized when he r ceived the 1968 Memorial ward of the Ch mical Marketing Re arch sociation. Th award stated, In addition to this evidence of our esteem, a grant of $1000 i made by the Chemical Marketing Research Associa­ tion to the University of Minnesota in the name of John A. cott, for the advancement of marketing and marketing research in the chemi­ cal industry through education. Scott was born and raised in Two Harbors, iinnesota, a small iron ore port on Lake Superior. He ent r d colI g in 1930 at nearby Hibbing, doing odd jobs to pay his way. Her his talent with the ~~ ~ llmic4l1llarkcti@ bmJUsocia!iDn * clarin t, banjo and violin w re handy, as he work d a a dan e band 1tltnwrial1Wlr~ musician. "It made me a triple threat," he sa s. JIlTWOI] or After two y ars in junior colleg , Scott transferr d to th Uni­ mb 1: .Jacobs JosqIt r. UIttr versity to finish degree work in ch mica I engine ring. He ay that J,' ~ the field was a natural for him because h was mechanically-minded Oumkal nlm1trllllll1l&urc!l RuoruIIiDn and had long had an interest in chemistry. tmS frNl jWlarr ill jll\'Ul1liizg its 1llll!7Dli.llJ!lNroto On graduation Scott joined Sinclair Oil's r arch and d velop­ aim Cott ment department in East Chicago, Indiana. Hi starting salary wa / Rr~tiOl! of ~il oatstlD1Mcg cotrtriMttiott> to 75¢ per hour, and he initially worked on -plant op rations and \Ir£ ~stm.l!11B- accq.!lmcc. lIll'tlw.\s~ k1wm'!le in process design. of cluJticlll tIlillltrtuljI r/sc4lt~ . Sinclair was not seriously interest d in petro h micals until 1950 n tt. 'rtl!l~ Sinclair Petrochemi als wa set up in 1952 with Scott at the h 1m . af mm1trtIr.,g anb nwrllrtiJlg ruc.m:!l ilL tlu chrnirol The new company's first product was odorle s solvent, quick] iu.lu.>try. tIuol!gk clucGtion . followed with aromatic op rations using raw mat rials availabl at 1arcus Hook. similar plant followed in Houston and, in 1956, --- Sinclair joined with Standard Oil (Ind.) to form Calum t itrog n Products Company. An ammonia plant was built at Hammond, Indiana. Another joint venture came in 1960 - Sinclair Koppers, which ha grown into a major producer of poly thylene, polystyren, tyr ne­ butadiene latexes and basic p rtochemical , built a unit in ROll ton. Sinclair pand d again in th 1962 acquisition of the T xa THE CHEMICAL Marketing Research Butadiene Chemical Company. Now th company had the facilities Association pre enled John A. Scott '34BCh mE with it 1968 M morial Award, to convert its r fin ry-produ ed butane and to open production which includ d a $1 ,000 grant to a routes to oth r chemicals. college of th winner's choice for the Today Sinclair is still expanding in petro hemi als at a s mingl advanc ment of marketing and marketing ver-incr asing rate. Y t, Scott points out, market res arch and mar­ re earch in the chemi al industry through ket development are more difficult today in th ch mi al industry education. Scott chos his alma mat r ­ than th y w r 15 years ago. Wh n Sinclair P trochemicals was a the University of Minn sota. neophyte, you could g t long-t rm contra ts that alma t guarant d success before you built a plant, he say. Today uch ontracts rar I e, ist. omr tition bas tight 11 d.

26 ALUMNI NEW DR. Jam s P. Quirk '4 BB '59M '59 PhD recently named to the p cial rank of Univ rsity Professor at the niversity of Kansas, true to his profession of conomic, ha b en working with about $88,000 sin e h w nt to Kansas in 1966. That is the total of three ational ci nce Foundation grants that nnance research the doctor is con­ ducting with two COUI agu s. Dr. Quirk's g n ral r search objective is to volve theorems con­ c rning qualitativ ly sp ciBc conomic systems that may prove applicable to other social cienc s as well. ltirnately, he expects that th information colI cted through his tudy will lead to further understanding of an economy's reactions to shock; that is, the way in which an economy either self-balances or tends to 0 ciliate. Inflation is a current problem; th re is talk of a drastic dip, or d pression, to follow. How vel', Dr. Quirk is reassuring, noting, "Each year the economy tends to increase the alue of its output b, about $30 billion if we maintain full employment. "You can s ," he continu s, ' that at this rate our $2 billion deficit (roughly equal to U.S. expenditures in Vietnam, about one-sixth of our federal budget) could be era ed within a year through increased tax receipt from this additional $30 billion of output, providing the war in i tnam suddenly ended." Dr. Quirk ay that th rationale for the 10 percent urtax recently pass d to offset inflation compI; a "sad hi tory." It all began with the 1963 tax cut, he says, which did what e eryone said it would do - increase tax revenues b timulating the economy. On the other hand - and unfortunately - Dr. Quirk belie e that what began a a reform bill, became an anti-recession bill in the cumber orne proces of being pa ed." nd the problem now is on the opposite side of the coin. That is, ho\ to subdue the econom ." He explains that growing military expenditures and the timulated conomy have combin d to cause inflation because the country' r sources ar bing emplo ed at close to full emplo ment level . HInt rest rat s are high r than the'v been in 40 ears" he a . "That cuts into inve tm nt sp nding and lea e an anti-inflationary eLI ct, \ hich in the circum tance j desirable. \"hile a tax increa e inc ssa.r to fight inflation, th 10 perc nt surtax imply continue th pr nt structure of tax rates. I , auld favor a mOre progre ive tax scale, a more equitable on . "I think you'd find mo l economi ts would favor flexibl exchange rat , remo ing th gold tandard to let merican mone ao fr on for ign xchange market a Canada did some ear aao. But politicians wouldn't like that. It would be ort of like doina awa ' \ ilh motherhood, appl pi or th Bo couts." H thinks Congr sional d bate have cent red on th war and balance of pa ments at th e pen e of what he con id r the more important probl m of high un mploym nt rate for earoe and sub tantial di cr panci s in salarie for groe and \ hit . Dr. Quirk, an expert in math matical conomic and aen ral quilibrium studi s, work d about th.r ear with th D partn1ent of Conun rc in Washington, D. . in both th C n u Bur au and th Office of Bu in s E onomic , and anoth l' thre ar in in­ du try. In addition to writing man joumal article , h has 0- authored the book An Introduction to Gen ral EquiliV1'itl1ll alld Welfare Economics. He taught at t. lar ' ni r it in Texa , th U Div rsity of Minn sota and for iaht ear at Pu.rdu b for going to K.U. Fi coll agu s who had kno" n Dr. Quirk' "ark in e onomic at Purdu I ft the aI;OUS s hooL the had gOl1 to from Purdu to join him at K. o TOBER, 1968 ... 7 THE UNIVERSITY University Names New Regent state's mall r coll g . H al 0 in­ Harry B. Hall, an orthopedic DR. dicat d that h do not look surgeon from Edina, iinnesota, favorably upon "out id rs" "ho was appoint d to the Univ rsity come onto campu to r at di­ Board of R gent ept mber 13 by Governor H arold LeVander. He turban was sworn in by University Presi­ His appointm nt i ti until dent Malcolm Moos at the Board th I ai latur meet in 1969. of Regents' meeting th same day. Hall fills the va ancy on th e 12- memb r board I ft by th J ul 2 th Two Regents d ath of Dr. CharI s VV . Mayo. A Republican who was chairman Lost in 1968 of th e Doctors for L Vand r Com­ mittee during th governor's 1966 campaign, Dr. Hall said that a HERMAN F. SKYBERG second medical school is needed in th stat to provide mor family He was a gen ral surg on \ ith a practitioners for non-m tropolitan sp cial int r t in urg I' of th areas. "I can ee one coming, but colon and small int tine. I don't know wher " he said. nd Dr. Ma 0 was a linn so la re­ be indicated that th chool h uld g nt from 1951 to hi d ath, and be affiliat d with a college. had b en chairman of th Board or A 1935 graduate of th Uni­ Regents from 1961-67. II , as also versity's m di al school, Dr. Hall a trustee of arl ton llege < nd has been a clinical professor in Prine ton niversit . Hi d ' ath orthopedic surgery at the Uni­ brought trib It to his haraclcr verity since 19.56. H i currently and publi s rvi from everal assistant chief of taff at Gillette Minn ota and national I aders. State Hospital for Crippled Chil­ The Honorable L ter . Malker­ dr n, St. Paul. H e r ceiv d his mas­ son, who succ ed d Dr. '[a 0 as ter's degree in orthop die urg ry chairman of th Board of R ' gents, DR. CHARLES W . MAYO in 1942. aid, ·'Dr. Ma 0 for man , man years was a gr at lead r of this Dr. Hall is the form r chief of . tate. His el ath will a great staff at Fairview and Fairview­ THE Honorabl Dr. harles 'vV. los to th Universit and to th e Southdale Hospitals, and i th pa t 1ayo '31MS m g, noted surg on and former chairman of th Uni­ tate. first vice president of the Stat "Dr. layo had a s nse of humor versity of 1innesota Board of R - M dical Society and a pa t presi­ that ahva ys "a very helpful wh , n gents, died July 2 when his car dent of the Hennepin County things were tough and he had a w nt off th e road near hi hom Medical Society. H e is medi al n of und rstanding that help d director of th Gov mor's Council and ov rtum d in a ditch. H died many p opl through th ir trials on Health, VVelfar and R habili­ on th day that would hav mark d and tribulations." tation and chairman of th gover­ his 70th birthday. Th d tor had achie eel fame as nor's committe reviewing stat - H was the last m mb l' of th a eivi lead r and as a latsman. mental hospital facilities. fam d ayo family to practice at In 1953 h was appoint d an alt J' ­ The doctor spent two month in th clinic founded by hi fath r, nate .S. d legat to th nited South Vi tnam and Indon sia in Dr. Charles H . Mayo, and his ation , and h aeled th 1962 as a medical advisor with lIncle, Dr. William J. Ma 0 , in sso iation for th Project HOPE. 1889. memb r of th Mayo lin­ many sp h s for that au . In Dr. Hall is r ported as saying ie's staff inc 1931, Dr. Ma 0 had working for th el velopm nt of that during his term as r gent h retir d in 1963, 1 a ing th clini /[inne ota, Dr. rayo lead th e 0111 - hop s to se greater coordination for th nrst tim without a Mayo mitte which llrg cl lh taco! it b tween th univ rsit and th on its staff or 1 oard or governors. amen 1m nt, and r ently s rv d 28 L ti l I E\V as honorary chairman of th e cit­ advisory committee to th e Minne­ izen group for a Kab togama na­ sota Potato Seed Certification De­ Public Affairs tional park. partment and was an early booster SchoolEstabl~hed of the Red River Valley Potato ll-IE Honorabl Herman F . Sky­ Growers' Association. A ne, School of Public Affairs, b rg, a m mb r of the University His death left a second vacancy established recently by the ni­ of linn sota's Board of Reg nts on the Board of Regents. These may versity's Board of Regents, will since 1949, di d S ptemb r 8 at be filled by ubernatorial appoint­ prepare students for service in na­ hi farm home near Fisher, Min­ ment until the next session of the tional, state, local and intemational n sota. State Legislature. government agencies and provide Tn his fourth six-year term, Mr. general education in public affairs. kyberg had s r ed on the Board "The establishment of the new of Regents longer than any other Scott Hall chool of Public Affairs is a further vigorou tep in bUilding the 'com­ current member, excepting Daniel Gaine of Owatonna. His term Announces Changes muniversity' concept and comple­ ments the recent establishment of would have e pi red in 1973. The Scott Hall series of the Uni­ the Center for rban and Regional s a Reg nt, he wa particularly versity Theatre will initiate new performance times and a new gen­ ffairs and the program in Law interested in his alma mater, the Enforcement cience," Pre ident Torthwest chool of Agriculture at eral seating policy this year. Per­ ~Ialcolm :\loos said. formances are scheduled for 3:30 rook ton. This school b came the Program curricula and faculty pm. Thur da s and Sundays· 8 niversity of 1innesota Technical of the pre ent Public dministra­ pm. Thursdays and Fridays; and In titute in 1966. Mr. SI-J'berg had tion Center will be incorporated in graduated in 1916. 7 and 10 pm. Saturdays, on the the school, which is to be a CL lif -long farmer, 1r. Skyberg announced dates for each series di i ion of the social science. primarily rai ed potato s and grain. play. Initially the chooI' pro ram will From 1929 until his death, he was Ticket are $2 each or $7.75 for be directed to the preparation of pre id nt of the Farmer' Coopera­ the season. Seating i on a first­ tudent with profes ional and tive ~Iarketing ociation of Ea t come, first-served basi. graduate degree in other field a Grand Forks. The 196 -69 erie include on well as in public admini tration. He \ a one of th early pres­ o ember 1-2, 7-10 A Flea In Her Undenrraduate offering for all id nt of th W st Polk County Ear' ovember 22-23, Iovember tud nt will al 0 be e.'·q>anded and Farm Bur au, and a president of 27 (performance at 3:30 and continuincr education for men and th linne ota Crop Improvemenl pm.), ovember 29-December I women now in go ernment ervice ociation in the 1940s. At that A iUan For All eason.s; January \ ill be aided by the creation of tim h also s r d as a director 31-Februar I, Februar 6-9 new in-ser ice and mid career cer­ of th Minnkota Power ssociation Henry N, FOIt I ; F bruary __ 1-2_, tificate and degre program. and th R d Ri r Valle Coopera­ F bruary 27- ilarch 2 The Begum' s tive Pow r ssociation. Opera; and pril I -19, 2·:L7 Ir. Sk b rg wa chairman of the Camino Real. Heller Honored Walt r H lIer, linn ota profe or of conomic and fonner presi­ PLANS SET FOR LEGISLATIVE dential economic advi or, r centl WORKSHOP NOVEMBER 9 l' c ived the . . Trea m Depart­ ment' Di tincrui hed [\ 'ce ward 'linne ota alumni chapt r pr id nt , board m mber pa t presi­ for hi work a a member of the dent and committe m mber will be attending th biennial L cri - dvi ory ommitte on Interna- lati vVorkshop to be h ld aturday momincr, 0 ember 5, at th tional Ion taT)' Arrangem nt . U of 1 lumni lub, h raton-Ritz Hot I, linn apoli . ecr tary of Trea ur. H nry Pr id nt IIalcolm Moo and admini trativ aids will pr ent and Fowl r aid of H II r. "We are discu th 1969-70 niver it legi lati n ed for the information p iall ind bt d to him for hi of alumni lead rs. kill dming a parti ularly difficult R gi tration will start at 9:00 a.m. and th e \ ork hop will run from p riod of tll n crotiation la t year 9:30 through 1l:30. Durin th luncheon at the lumni lub from in carr 'ing on h Ipful privat -con­ 11 :30 to 12:30 there \ ill be an annOlln ment and pre ntation of ver ation in Europ ." th Out tanding hapt r of the Y ar ward. Hell r i urr ntI active a an 1an in the group plan to go to th Linne ta-Purdu football advi or on conomi affair in the gam in th aft moon. pr id ntial campaign of ice Pre id nt Hubert Humphre . OCTOBER, 196 29 Tutorial Groups Funded by Ford firms whil at th sam time pro­ viding resourc which will en­ The Ford Foundation has grant d incidence of failur among th s hance the amount and quality of th Univ r ity $42,500 for a pro­ student with th niversit by rear h p rform d," D an Paul gram of tutorial study groups for giving th m th individualized h lp V. Cramb ch of the chool of Bu i­ disadvantaged students. Ten stud th y n ed," said Jim Reeves, co­ n ss dministralion aid. groups, plann d for th upcoming ordinator of the Univ r it)' pro­ R sear h in the nt l' is pri- year, will consist of a couns lor/ad­ grams for di advantag d stud nts. marily onc rn d with th d lop­ vi or, fom upp rclassmen tutors, m nt and u of computers in faculty tutors, and 10 to 15 dis­ bu in ss. The finns invit d to par­ advantaged students. Williams Scholars ti ipal wer sel cted from tho Fundamental recomm ndations having comple and Iarge- cale in­ for this program weI' mad by the At New High formation requirem nts. Business University Task Force on Human Sixty-six 'illiam holar hip representatives will me t periodi­ Rights, appointed by Presid nt lal­ a I' cord numb l' - W I' a\ arded cally with enter faculty to recei e colm Moos aft r the as assination for th 1968-69 a ademi )' ar. The r earch r port, valuate re arch of th Rev. Maltin Luther King, l' cipient w l' elect d from a and participat in proj cts appli­ Jr. The Task Force r commend d group of 98 qualifi r , also the cabl to til or tical models of '1ive" that th University und rtak a highest figur in history. total of information systems problem . program of recruitm nt an I as i - $74355 ha b en earmarked for the tan e for disadvantaged tud nt cholarshi ps. with palticular reference to mi­ "Thi i th great t year ver He Will Help nority-group stud nts. for th 'illiam cholarship pro­ "The tutorial groups hop to gram," ~Iinn ota thl tic Dir ctor Clean Up Potomac r duce the prospect of the high Iar h R man aid. "I b Ii ve th George J. chroepf r, prof s Or of trem ndou incr a both in num­ sanitary ngin ring in the civil ber of qualifi rs and recipient engin ring departm nt, ha be n Routhe Named hows graphically th quality of appointed one of two advi or to Extension Leader tud nt athl t s moll d at th til gov rnment of the Di trict of Univer ity." olumbia on th $60-million proj­ H arlund C. Routhe, Univer ity x­ Thirty p rcent of the 327 var ity ct to om bat poIlu tion in th tension program lead r for agri­ athl tes qualified for th scholar­ Potoma River. cultural technology and production, ships which r quire a grad pOint Schro pf r said plan call for was appointed associate director of average of 2.8 (3.0 is a B averag ). th D. . ' Vat r Pollution ontrol the Agricultmal Extension Service The 196 Williams cholar hip Plant to I' mov up to 90 perc nt in mid-September by th ni­ Fund drive start d July 1 and will of organic wa te material and versity Board of Reg nts. H fill continue through th f otball s a­ solids from th wag befor re­ the position left vacant last y ar son. It is hoped that the campaign turning the tr at d \ at r to th when Roland Abraham was named will at I ast equal the n arly Potoma . At pr s nt, thi plant l' - director of the Agricultural Ex­ $75,000 which was expended on th mov s 75 p rcent of su h ma­ tension Service. cuuent scholarships. terial -as do s th tr atm nt plant The Ext nsion Service includ s for th Twin ities area at Pig' 220 extension agents in 92 county Ey Lak. offic s, 30 area agents and coordi­ Business School Th original D . . and Twin nators, and a tate staff of over 100 iti s plant went into op rati n subj ct matter speciali ts and ad­ AnnouncesProgram in 193. stud is now unden a ministrative personn 1. Eight n major, inne ota-based on the Twin iti faciliti s also. Routhe has s rved th program busin s ha joined th School Incr as d population in both ar as, as leader for agricultmal produc­ of Busin ss Administration's Associ­ as w II as a growing publi awar­ tion and t chnology sinc 1963. He at s Program. The firms will int r­ n s of th dang r of pollution, join d the Minnesota Extension act with the Univ rsity through its demands irnpro m nt in the taff in 1952 as fi eld man for th faciliti s. Southw t Farm Managem nt As­ n w Management Information Sy - sociation at Worthington. From terns R 's arch ent r wh n prob­ "Th r ar a great m 11 ar as 1955 to 1963 he was ex l nsi n I ms, 11 ds and p ri nc s of th in lh , ountr with far \ or e pollu­ conomist in farm manag m nt. lIe busine s s ar r lat d to lh 11- tion probl ms than tho fa d 011 am d his B with distin tion in t r's research. th Potomac," hro pfer aid. "It's 1950 and his MS in agricultural "The program promis ub- n oUI"aging that th officials of th conomics in 1954 from Minn so ta. stantial b n fits to participating District of olumbia hav r og- LUMNI NEW 30 niz d th probl m and ar doing som thing about it." n hro pf r's futuristic recom­ ROLLIE JOHNSON SAYS . .. mendation in 193 , th Twin Citie plant was de igned much mOre eco­ Join The Gopher Pre-Game nomi ally - and t chnically ab ad of it tim. Otb r citi shave r - Club For The Inside Story! c n lly adopt d its d sign. 000 As n loyal niversity of Minnesota football fan and season ticket buyer, grant, estimat d at $1<10,000, w > want you to know that the Athletic Department at the U and " CCO­ ba b n award d to th ni ersity T have combined to establish a new football luncheon club - THE G PHER PRE-GAME CLUB - and it's for the Saint Paul area only! by th Federal Wat r Pollution (Th re will be no Viking Fan Club.) ontrol dministration of the It' called "pre-game" because it will meet each Thursday noon during D partm nt of lnt rior for training the sea on and will concentrate on the game earning up on Saturday! of much-needed profes ional in B t of all well have the head man himself, 1urray \ armath EVERY the DeJd of \ at r pollution control. week. He will Beld your questions from the floor, narrate the film (I'll ex­ Th program aids student work­ plain in a mom nt) and present awards to the top-Hight high school player ing toward a master' degr e in of thre conf r nce each week. civil ngineering and include Th aint Paul onf rence, the uburban High School League and the tip nd, dep ndency allowances, kline onf rence will each select their lineman of the week, and their tuition and fee . b k of the week, and tho. e kid , with their coaches will be our guest , and receive Certificates from Coach \ armath. As for the movie, they will mo tly con ist of highli ht of pa t game by th ophers and their opponents. For example: let' ay we are playing Dean Receives Iowa this aturday. We'll have about fh'e minute of the hi hlights CofCAward of Iowa' game with the team the played last week; five minutes of high­ light of the team the Gophers pIa red last week, and ten minutes of the herwood O. B rg, dean of th highlights of last year's ~Iinnesota-Iowa game. And furray \ armath will niver ilY' In titut of gricul- narrate them for vou. ture, \ a.' honor d recent] b the o YO EE: THE GOPHER PRE-G }'lE L K HEOll WILL BE Great r finne, polis hamber of F LL OF EW F R GOPHER FAN - not ex-planation of what omm r f r outstanding contri- happened la t week. bution to Am ri an agri ultur . Warmath will know by Thill' da. each week the condition of his crip­ In pr nting the Chamb r's out­ ples - \ ho can pIa and who can't. He ne\'er knows that by }.Iondays. He'll give u the real. hone t-to-goodne couting report on the upcoming tanding achi v m nt a\ ard, J. opponent. Ro Furber, pre ident of th In addition, when the Gophers are playin~ at home. we'll have the PR reat r finn apoli hamb r of man of the vi iting team at the head table with the up-to-the-minute ommerc, omm nded Berg for truth (?) about our opponents. the work h had don for th H r are the dates and place of our luncheons: p ople of linn ota and for world tober 3 - LO\\TY October 11 (oop - it' a Frida\,) Lowrv agriculture a chairman of the Ja­ October 17 - Lo,,:rv October 24 ~ Holida~ ' tional Food and Fib r Commi ion ctob r 31-Lowr o\'ember 7 - LO\Vl~ ' and a d an of th In titute. B rg o\'ember 14 - Lo~\'rY and the fin, Ion 1 ovember ~1- LOWT)' ha I ad th In titute inc 1963 \V had to go on Friday, 0 tob r 11 becau e the aturdav game is Home­ aft r rving for ix h ad coming with IJIinoi and the h, d pre\iou Iy cheduled some Thur day of th ni rsity's noon Homecoming acti\itie . conomics d partment. \V 're telling you ab ut thi in apr onal note in the hope that you B rg is also an outstanding 4-H \\ ill purcha e one or more ea on licket for a re en'ed table in , choice nlumnu , and h ha hO\ n con­ location. " e are al 0 oliciting finTI to buy ea on-tables (of 6 or ) for u in entertaining cu tomers with a DIFFEREJ T kind of IUDch n. tinued int re t in and upport f en on ticket ar pri d at 30.00 each. [ ason ticket after tober 3 th 4-H program \ hile at th ni­ are ~1.00] Indi\'idual.lun heon tick t ar 3.00 ea h. " 'e pay :?.2- v r it . for the meal, .2.'5\' crratmty and u e the remaining. 0 to pav for printing. omp for Lx high hool players and Lx coache , th head-tabl gue·t' . projectioni t, tc. DONT MISS . rou . thi iTa pr fit-makin a venture! It' a nice to nh' r- it of ~[inn ota fo thall fan - and it will b held in aint Paul O;"'TLY. THE OCTOBER 12 If ou'r inter t d - and we hop you are - 111 rour ch k. pa\'­ abl to W -TV PHER PR -GA IE L B, and th numb r of HOMECOMING sea on ti k ts you want, to \V -TV, 5 Ea. t Fourth tr et, t. Paul. LUNCHEON linn sota 101.

OCTOBER, 196 31 THE ALUMNI Agri ultur OrvHl L. Fre man to Dr. Piccard Will Receive OAA th ational attl Industry d­ visory ommitt , 1964, and th Go rnor' d iSory Commitl on tomic D velopm nt Probl ms, 1957-59.

Wallace Nalned OAA Recipient John . Wallace, '49MS' , dir c­ tor of probation for th Courts of w York Cit , will receive th niversity' hip;he t award - th Outstanding chi vement ward­ at th 4th nnual 1eeting of th School of Social 'ork lumni - sociation, October 15. MISS BARBARA STUHLER DR. JEANNETIE PIC CARD ationally acknowledO'ed as an outstanding probation x cutive, Fam d balloonist Dr. J ann tt card mad the choi to Wallace ha held his curr nt po i­ arlier and sustain d clerical am­ Ridlon Piccard '42PhD will re­ tion sinc th probation ag nc bition to b come h r husband's ceive the University's highest hon­ was created a. a on olidation of assi tant in the r lati ly new field or - the Outstanding Achievem nt s veral ag n i s. Award - at the finn sota Alum­ of aeronautics. And she enroll d at Wallace began his ar r a ad p­ nae Club's Annual Meeting on the University as a doctoral candi­ uty probation offi r for Ram v October 19. University Vice Pre - date. ount , St. Paul, follo\ ing grad­ id nt Stanley J. Wenb rg will mak Miss Barbara Stuhler '54 1 , who head d a four-m mb r d l­ uation from Ia ale tel' 011 g in th presentation. 1940 and sri a a commissioned Currently a consultant to the Di­ egation on exchange between the Overseas Education Fund of the offic r in th M dical Oil) . ft r rector of the Mann d Spac craft r ceiving his I W from th ni­ cent r, Houston, T xas, Dr. Pic­ Leagu of Women Vot r and the Sovi t Women's Committee in v I' it , b e S(,J d approximat I 15 card, with h er famous husb and, months a a ps chi atri so ial \ 'ork- 1967, will keynote th meting. Jean Piccard, made space history, r at a eteran' dministration from an initial r cord-making fli ght Speaking on "Russian Women To­ in 1934 - the 57,559-foot altitud day," Mi s Stuhler will tell th gave Jeann tte Piccard th world group why Soviet women are clos title for women - until Jean Pic­ to achi ving on-the-job equality card's death in 1963. with m n, why th y well th ranks Following graduation from Br n of work rs in what ar usually b - NlawT, Jeannette enrolled at the Ii v d to b m n's fi Ids, and why, Univ rsity of Chicago wb re she though th y outpac Am rican majored in ch mistry, studying un­ worn n in profe sional achi ve­ der Jean Piccard. Th y were mar­ m nt, their statu can be tati . ried two weeks after she got h er Miss Stuhler, an a sociat prof - mast r's d gr e. Th Piccards sp nt sor and associate director of th s yen years in Switzerland before Univ rsily's World Affairs C nt r, returning to the nit d Stat in has an x mplary r cord of com­ 1939. Dr. J an Piccard wa call ed munity and public ervic . In 196 to th U niv r ity of Minn sota, not S cr tary of tat D an Rusk ap­ to teach organic hemistry, but to pointed h r to the U.S. National be a prof ssor of aeronautical ngi­ Commission for UNESCO. Earlier neering. she held appOintments from former It was then that Jeannette Pic- Governor and later S cretary of JOHN A. WALLACE LU 1 I NEWS 32 Hospital. Wallac th n b cam a Honored By Medical Alumni probation offic r and subs qu ntly assistant dir ctor of probation and parole, linn sota tate Board of Parole. tb r positions Wallac has h ld include thr e y ars as an x cutive with the ational Probation and Parole ssociation and four y ars a director of probation for the upreme Bench of Baltimore ity, l\faryland. He i a memb r of many prof sional organizations, including the cad my of rtiRed ocial 'Vorkers, and he ha been a con u1tant to th ational oun­ cil on rime and Delinquenc and other federal ag ncies.

ALUMNI BRIEFS

AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING RE­ WALTER H. HAllORAN, M.D. ANDERSON C. HILDING, M.D. UNION. The 25th nni ersary c 1- ebration of th cbs of 1943 wa Dr. Walter H. Halloran '15 ID, Jackson, Minne ota, and Dr. Anderson held JuI 12 at th Lafayett Club C. Hilding '19 1D, Duluth, finne ota, will receive the l\fedical lumni on Lake finn tonka, Iinnesota. sociation's Harold . Diehl ward at th group' nuual ~leetinlT on Eighte n of approximatel 0 grad­ October 11 in the Leamington Hotel, ~Iinneapoli. The Diehl ward uates of the aeronautical engineer­ acknowledges out tanding contribution to th medical prof ion the ing group attended the afternoon Uni er ity and it Iedical chooI, the ~Iedical lumni ociation and and ning affair. Faculty and ad­ the community. ministration gue t from the ni­ Dr. Halloran, who has headed the Juli Brilliart Home for Retarded \' r it included Profe sor (Em r­ Childr n in Jackson for e eral ear, i a renowned authority in the itu ) John D. kennan, found r care of retarded oung ter . He ha been in general practice in Jack on of the eronautical Engineering ince graduation and i a member of th merican ociet of General d partm nt and h ad of th d­ Pra titioners. partm nt for about 30 ars; Dr. Dr. Hilding i known for hi work in OpthalmololT and Otolaryngol­ Richard Jordon, head of the f­ ogy particularl for re arch of tracheobronchial muco a and its ciliary chanical ronautical chool and action, the effect of ci arette mok on muco a of the re pirator), tract a graduat of th nr t aeronautical and th cornea. He i a memb r of the merican Board of Ophthal­ engine ring class under Dr. ker­ molog and Otolar ngolog , and man otIler ocietie con rned \VitIl man; Dr. P. R. S thna, recent1 ap­ hi sp cialization . point d h ad of th eronautical Engin ring d partment; and Pro­ fessor lfred ronk pre entl h ad the ero department, and an m­ dent David , ei , D .D ..; "ice of Texa Md's Deparhn nt of er­ inent sci nti t and ballooni t her- Pre ident John arro\l; and ecre­ Engine ring and form r1 If. Bob Holdal eli- tar '-Trea ur r, Ir. David P. on th niversit' ero EnlTineer- u nand no\ " a p ct Bowes. iug fa ulty. of a ronautical ngin ring, and Th oc asion mark d th fir t Dr. Jordan, th future plan of til A U OF M DAY. The Gr at r Bo ton publi appearan for Prof or l\lechanical eronautical chool. hapt r held a niv r it)' of 1Iin­ A kerman inc hi h art operation earl half of the el brant nota Da ' r centl" - familie of arli r thi ar. His enthu in ti wel' from out-of- tate, cominrr alumni lTath red for" an outing at participation and pirit d r mark from a. far as onnecti ut, , . a h­ ochituat tat Park Nati k, wer r a uring in lications that he in ton and alifornia. ~Ia a hu ett, for fo d, arne \ ill 0011 b full recover d . and all tIlat ITO \VitIl < picnic. Th prolTram 'in 1uded a movi NEW OFFICE RS FOR '68-'69. At th ir pres lltation on "From Balloon Board of Dire tor m ting r- CALIFORNIA AWARD DINNER. EilTht Gondola to Iann d pa craft," nt1 " th' entral lumni per on gath r d to honor Dr. 1 Ol~­ by Dr. J annette Piccard, wife of lub, Eau laire, 'Vis on in, man E. humwav a til 19 out­ f rm r Prof sor J e, n Piccard of lected th following offic r : Pr i- standing a1umnu· from th North- OCTOBER, 196 33 m California area r cently. Dr. hUIm ay, in accepting th award plaqu , pok bri fly about hi work in the heart transplant fi eld. Also att nding \ as President Em ritus O. 1eredith Wilson, \ ho addre s d the group. w offi rs for th orth rn California Club ar Presid nt Maurice J. lson, Vice President Fr d Winter, SecI' tary Gene LaBi - sonier, Tr asurer Mrs. Eil n Fuste, and Directors Judge J 0 eph Kar h and Caifson John on .

I T ANNUAL MEET SCHEDULED NOV. 1 The annual m ting of the Institute of Technology Alumni Association will be h ld on Friday, ovem­ b I' 1, 196 . A female quartet, "Th ote Cracker Sweets," will en t r­ GLE REED, assi tant to the direct01' of th e Athletic D parlment, pictured tain. Roland V/ard II is chairman at far left, and 1968 Homecoming Chairman Jim Hemak, for right, discuss the for the event. climax of the 1968 Homecoming festivities - tll big game b tween Minnesota and Illinois on October 12 - with the key p rsonalilies for that game. Gopher Football Captain oel Jenke stands s cond fr om tTl e left. and next to him, Head Dr. Thorn Passes Football Coach Murray Warmath. The first full day of Hom coming a tiviti s Dr. Lewis W. b gins this year on October 8. Thom '15DDS, who had prac­ ticed dentistry in Make Your Reservation Now Minneapolis for more than 50 MINNESOTA HOMECOMING years, died in late August. He was PEP FEST LUNCHEON 75. The University Hotel Radisson appointed Dr. Thursday, October 10 Thorn an instructor in the School of Dentistry in January 1919. He Alumni, parents, fri e nd s of the Uni versity - you are became assistant professor in 1924, invited to th e 1968 Hom ecoming Pep Fest luncheon. clinical assi tant prof ssor in 1939, Thursday, October 10, at 12:00 noon in th e North clinical associate professor in 1940 Star Ballroom, Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis. Meet and clinical professor in 1945. For Coach Mu rray Warmoth, Captain Noel Jenke, Ath­ s veral years Dr. Thorn also act d letic Director Marsh Ryman, Minnesota All-Americans, as chairman of th e Extension Com­ other celebreties. See coronation of the 1968 Hom e­ mittee for the School, which com­ coming Queen. Enjoy college songs and festivities­ mitt e had charge of po t-graduate led by the U of M Men's Glee Club, Pep Band, Porn cours s. H was gen ral chairman Porn Girls. of th 50tb anniv rsary of the Send in your reservation todoy! founding of the School of Den­ tistry. The doctor resign d his po- ition with the Univ rsity in 1950. Homecoming Committee, 205 Coffman Union Initiating th reorganization of University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455 the n w dentistry alumni group a Please rese rve places at $4.00 each for the Homecoming Pep a student, Dr. Thorn was th Den­ Fest luncheon, October 10, Hotel Radisson, 12:00 noon. tal Society's alumni director for 15 Name ______years. He was also a memb r of the board of dir ctors of th Min­ Address ______nesota Alumni Association for 21 ______Amount Enclosed ______(Co ntinued 0 /1 page 37) 34 AROUND &ABOUT

ClA ______HANSEN '60BS SLOAN '39BA HAFSTAD '26BSEE SANDELL '49BEE '39 he has been an instructor at the ni- to the Kation's tomic Energy Program John W. loan '39BA has joined tll v rsity. on Jul 10. Iso a recipient of the ru­ Ralph L. Rickgarn '60B writes that he architectual and ngineering finn of Gro­ versity's Out tanding Achi vement Award, v r Dimond ssodat s Inc. a vic pres­ has made tll st p from governmental em­ Dr. Haf tad is \-ice president for research id nt for r al e tate and financial s ryices. ploym nt back into the acad mic world. at the R earch Laboratorie of General lIe was previously manager of the invest­ lIe is now dean of studen < tRick r fotor Corporation. ment real e tat department of Gold College, Houlton, 1aine. Bond Stamp Company and the city '48 mortgage d partm nt of the Equitable '65 Ralph G. White '4 BSChem of Wash­ Charles choen '64B of 'Vayzata, Life Assuranc ociety of the nited ington, D .C., has joined the staff of the Minne ota, is now a broker for the Harris tates. American Chemical ociety as assistant pham tock Brokers in the 'ortlnve t­ educational ecretary for continuing edu­ '60 m Bank Building, Iiuneapoli. cation. The St. Paul native became a Miss Jessie L . Hansen, 'l.T. (A CP) re earch chemi t with Rohm and Haas '60B has been cho en by the American '66 Company, Philadelphia, after recei\;na odety of Iedical Technologi 15 to Army pecialist Fice Michael L. Larson his Master's degree from the ruver ity receive the 1968 Kimbl Medical T ch­ '66BA received th Bronze tar fedal of Iowa. vVhite wa a research fellow in nology Award, given to publicly recog­ July 5 during ceremonies in Vietnam. He tlle Department of Ch mical Engineering nize and financiallv r ward the most was pr ented the award for meritorious at the Diver ity of Iinnesota from out tanding contrib~tion to bett r pro­ rvic in ground operations a!1ainst hos­ 1956-61 before he join d the ational c dural m thod in m dical technology. tile forc . Larson i a combat report r cience Foundation in 'a hington. he developed a n w laboratory t t that and infomlation peciali t \ ith tlle 1 t where he served as pedal as i taut in mak po ible the use of an effective Air avalry Division's dministration the Graduate cience Faciliti program. tranquillizing treatment for p chiatric Company. lIe was a report r Witl1 the patients. Th ,\ ard, which includ s 500 t. Paul Di patch before entering the '49 and a silv 'r plaque, was fonnally pre­ army in 1966. Donald H. Sandell '49BEE has be n ~c nted J un 27 in lIou ton, T xas. After Institute of Technology ____ promoted by Commom ealth As ociat r ceiving h r degre "with distinction" Inc. to manager of the Transmis ion Line from th niv rsity, 'l is Han en served and ub tation Construction in the Con- as a stud nt t hnologist up rvisor at '26 truction fanaaement Division. In thi 1h niv rsity of Iinne ota lIospitals Dr. Lawrence R. lIat tad '26B EE re- new po ition, the l inneapolis native will until 1962, wh n she was appointed c iv d th tomic Energy Commis- plan, schedule, coordinate and supervise enior m dical t chnologist. inc 1967 sion Citation for meritorious contribution his ction' construction a ignments. andell joined Commonwealth in 1965 after 17 year as a prof ional electrical engin er. '50 you get Dr. IIenry B. Hcnni '50BEE is stud .­ ing in G nnan at tlle In titute of Organic Everyday interest in serving you Re earch, niver ity of runich, under and high bank interest on your the Do\ Chemicdl Com pan " career more denti t a signmcnt program. group savings. Specialists in home 1 ader in the comp, ny' B ozene Re­ arch Laboratory, Dr. Hennis joined loans and savings services since Dow as a chemist in 1956. He took hi interest 1874. Low cost PhD ,t the niver it)' of ~ l i souri. Richard L. Jo1111 011 'OB EE was ~&M savings account elected pre ident of Iiddle ' est ervice at r~ loans available, ® Compan ' and International fiddle " 'e t n

three y ars in India as a teacher and joining Litton in 1965. Ranking first in California. \'et ran of 19 years with consultant to engineerin g ompanies. II hi s cIa in th marketing d partment, he th e bank, he moved to an Franci co in has taught industrial ngin ering at Stan­ received an MBA in marketing and man­ 1963 after advanCing through variou ford, M.I.T., the Indian Institute of ag ment from ew York niversity. In lending posts in Los Angeles. IIe was Management in Calcutta, Oregon State, 1964 Dahlberg was awal"Cl d a gold nam d senior vice presid nt and Nortl1 rn and the niversities of Olth Dakota and 111 dal by the Am erican Mark ting Asso­ division cOI11TI1ercial I nding head in 1965. Minn ota. From 1951-54 h was manu­ ciation for outstanding achiev ment and facturing specialist for A. O. Smith for his contribution to tl1 marketing Medical ______Corporation, Milwaukee; and, in addi­ fi Id . tion , ha done re earch and quality con­ BrltCe Birnberg '63B B, cost account­ trol work for industrial corporations in ant in the Offic of th Controller, U.S. '60 both th Unit d States and India. Agency for International Dev lopment, Lyle D. BighZey 'BOB Phm was recently r ceived a Meritorious Honor Award and appOinted s nior analytical chemist at '58 $750 recently for overtime work and ac­ Minnesota >tining and Manufacturing. Donald E. Ryks '58BCh mE graduated ceptance of extra responsibiliti s. Cur­ Bighl y returns to St. Paul from Michigan. May 17 from the 15th session of the Pro­ rently a m mber of Board of Directors gram for Manag m nt D velopment of tl1e Washington, D.C. chapter of llie Graduate ______conducted by the Harvard University Minnesota Alumni Association, Bimberg Graduate School of Business dministra­ joined A.LD. in 1963 as an accountant '53 tion. trainee. In 1965 he was promoted to a sistant chi f of the Payroll Accounting Richard J. Howe 'SOBS '51M '53PhD etion in the Office of the Con troll r, ha been nam d assistant di vision man­ Business - ______and in 1967 b came assistant chief of the ager of t11e East Texas Divi ion in th Central Payroll Branch. Production Department of Humble iI & R fining Company. A nativ of 1in­ '22 '65 neapolis, he also holds an MS in industrial Mis Sara French Fall '22BSB of Ivar E . Siqvelalld '65BSB was pro­ managem nt from M.LT. How join d Duluth, Minnesota, r cently/ubliSh d a moted to Army captain in early April the Jersey Production R search ompany short book entitled Organize Confusion. while serving willi the 25th Aviation in Tulsa in 1959, and was named h ad of The volume is the story of Mr. and Mrs. Company in Vietnam. A pilot in the com­ the drilling re arch s tion lli n:>.t year. Fall's adventures in the wilderness of pany, Capt. Siqveland holds the Dis­ north rn Minnesota and southern On­ tingui hed Flying Cross and th e Air '55 tario, and tells of camping, fishing, hunt­ M dal for valor. Dr. Hugh McCardle 'S5M '59PhD has ing and staying at backwoods resorts. r sign d his post at th Univ rsity of Mrs. Fall describes it as being "both '66 Minnesota as associ. t director of t11e amusing and practical." Published by Davicl C. Fulcher '66B B has be n Bureau of Loans and Scholar hips to Vantag Pr ss, the book s II for $2.95. named winner of the 1968--69 $3,500 take a teaching poSition at Radford 01- Kai r Fellowship in busine s awarded by lege, Radford, Virginia. McCardle, who '42 Kais r Aluminum and Ch mical Corpo­ joined the Bureau in 1955, had pre­ Al H. Nathe '42BSB, vice president of ration. A tea hing assistant in Minnesota's viously work d in th niversity's Bur au corporate planning and a director of L vi marketing department, Fulcher is com­ of Educational Res arch, beginning in Strauss & Company, has b en named a pI ting work on a master of busin ss 1951. Previously McCardle taught and director of the Am erican Apparel Man­ administration and preparing to nt r llie coa hed at Spring alley High chool ufactur r's Association. He is also chair­ doctoral program. for four years. He has al 0 h Id summ r man of the Association's marketing om­ t aching positions as a vi iting prof sor mitt . Nath join d Levi & Strau s in law School ______at the University of Loyola, Chi ago, in 1958 as marketing r search manag r, 1962 and at K nl State Univer ity, 1963. following similar assignm nts witl1 both retailing and manufacturing organjzations. '49 '57 He holds a Master's d gree from Berkeley. A. W. "Tom" Clausen. '49LLB has b en named ex cutive vic president of the '63 Bank of Am ica, t11 world' larg l Erick S. Dahlberg '63BSB has b n bank. Clau n, who operates out of the promot d to vice president and con troll r San Francisco h ad office, has also been of Business Equipm nt Cent rs, a divi­ appoint d vice chairman of th bank' sion of Litton Industri s. Dahlb rg was g neral finance committ . II will con­ tr a ur r and controller of T.B.A. Cen­ tinue to head Bank of Am rica' com­ ters, Inc., a subsidiary of Uniroyal, b fore mercial lending activities in Northern 36 LUM I EW Thorn, continued . years, representing the School of Dentistry. Dr. Thorn serv d as treasurer of the ~Iinneapolis Di trict Dental As- ociation 1923-24; as vice pre­ ident, 1932-34; and was elected preSident for 19.35-36. He \ as pres­ ident of the ~Iinn e ota tate Dental A sociation, 1944-45; an merican Dental A sociation (AD ) del­ e ate, 194 -50 and 1959-60, and an D trustee, 1952-5 . On February 23, 1961 the ni­ versity of ~Iinnesota presented him with their Alumni ervice Award for his dedication to dental educa­ CURRE T offic rs and directors ot the Winona Chapter ot the Minnesota tion, exemplary alumni service and Alumni sociation m et recently to set their Annual Dinner meeting tor the exceptional loyalty and devotion to third week in ovember. Seated, left to right, are Dr. Curtis Rohrer '59DDS, the niver ity. board member, Irs. John (Penny) Breitlow '58BS, secretary-treasurer; Mrs. 111e doctor al 0 served a u- Maurice (Sally) chllh '48BA, board m mber; tanding, LeRoy Backus '28Lib- rts, past president; Harvey Robinson '40BSB, president; Gordon Addington preme Grand ~laster of D elta ig­ '39i\.IEd, 'ice PI' sident. Board m ember O. ]. Fawcett '58 IS i not pictured. rna Delta fraternity.

We'll help ... if you have kids on campus Kids don't always go to school where their parents did, but there are still plenty of grads with offspring on the Minnesota campus. To you parents, we believe we can be helpful. Most students wrestle more with money matters than with course materials. Either they're short on cash and don't know qu ite what to do or have the money but can't keep it under control. We 're so handy, right on campus, that we are an easy shoulder to lean on. So when your boy or girl comes to the University, send them to us. We know their problems. We have plenty like them in our customer family. We can fix them up with as close to foo l-proof checking service that you'll find . We 'll keep an eye on their money habits. We 'll help them out in every way possible. Just to be sure, why don't you come look us over yo urse lf.

UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK WASHINGTON A T OAK ST. M I N NEAPOLIS. MINN. PH ON E 331-5907

CT BER, 196 37 played by Pan Am rican Airlines for th '44 [ , Bab on Park, Fla. ; liss A. L past 27 year and was Powerplant Engi­ Erickson '17U m, lbuqu rqu , .M. DEATHS ne ring Sup rintendent at the J t Engine Al 0 Miss E. C. Fargo '39M , 0 ean Overhaul Bas, John F . Kenn dy lnt r­ prings, Mass.; Carlll. G rdcs'SSB G '01 national Airport, ew York, at the tim Los ng I s, Calif.; W . J. McGrath John K. Mortland '24LLB '67JD, of his death . Following graduation from Minneapolis, an advertising agent with '43B , Hopkins, finn. ; O. ]. Grathwol Owatonna (Minn.) High chool he join d '29LLB, Excelsior, Minn.; Dr. H . Colle & McVoy Advertising Company, tlle Marin s and rv d in icaragua. II died July 30. He was 69. While attending Gr CIl C ' llDD , D nv r, Colo.; Mis~ was recruited initially by Pan merican ]. TIarbo '42BA, Lo Angele , ali f. , the Uillv rsity, Mortland b cam a mem­ as an appr nti engine r; two year b r of Gr y Friars, Phi Kappa Psi fra­ R. M . IIedrick '54B , t. Paul, Minn. lat r h beeam a fli ght engin er and Mrs. R. IIerdliska '22BA, Prine ton t rnity and was managing editor of the J. went to N w York. In 1948 ilkey r - 'finn .; Mrs. . ]. lTooper '21B , Warr 11 , Ski-U-Mah magazin . His former v.o~a­ e i ed an award from the ational A s - tional ex peri nce was as an adverb mg Ohio; D. G. Jensen '42B EE, Waukegan. iation of ugg tion ys tems for th I . sal sman for th e M inneapolis Journal; III. , C. Jesperso n ' lOB EE, nni ton, developm nt of an accurate system of Ala.; E . C. Jewett '97BA, Port Murray advertising manager and part owner of trouble- hooting aircraft e n ~ in es. This the Fort Meyers N ews, Fort Meyer , .J.; W . F. Joachim '2OB 1E, Pr scott. y tem has b en adopted by Pan Am eri - riz. F lorida; Minneapoli radio annOtJDcer; can as th iT tandard troubl - hooting copywriter and account executive with Iso, Mis G. W . Boos 'S7B , Way­ technique. za ta, Minn.; M iss E. JIaggerty ':21 LA. Campb ll-Mithun and Olm ted & Foley Dr. John tllhr '17 1D, who had Advertisin g Agencies. "T. St. Paul; Miss E. L. Kadri '54 A, 1!in­ practiced in Stillwat r, 1innesota, since neapolis; Mi s J. M. Knapp '46B HE. t. 1st Lt. C. Carter N elson '64BA, Minne­ 1920, di d July 30 at age 8S. Dr. tuhr apolis, was killed in Vi tnam ovem­ Paul; Miss R. C. Laramy '26BA, t. Paul; graduated from 1acalt's ter olleg b­ Mrs. D. T . McLaughlin '39BA, linu ­ ber 19, 1967. An aircraft commander fore entering Medical hool, and s r ... ed with th 559th Tactical Flight quadran, apoli ; Mrs. ]. C. Melville '99BA, 1[in­ in the 1edical orps in World War I. neapolis; R. J. O'Brien '3gB B, an Lt. Nelson had been in Vi tnam two Dr. Leoll J. Tiber '20MD, Lo Angele, months at the time of his death. lIe re­ Rafa I, Calif. ; Miss C. L. Persons '47B California, a ofounder of 1idway IIo - t. Paul; Mrs. C. B. Ramlow '26B , t ceived his commission in 1965. lIe wa a pital and the Community IIospital of Paul ; and C. B. Randall 'OSLLB . St. Paul. graduate of Uillver ity High School and Gardena, died July 20 at ag 77. lIe had also had attended Lawrenc Colleg. The practiced obst trics and ~yn c?logy in Distinguished Flying Cross, Purpl Heart California for 30 year . Dr. Tlber was and the Air Medal with the first and formerly th head of th obstetrics and second Oak Leaf Clu ter were awarded gynecoiogy department at Cedars of to him posthumously. Th Di tinguished Lebanon Hospital, as well as a lead r Flying Cross citation r. ad: "R pea t ed~ y in th J wish community and an activc flying into intense ho s ti l ~ ground fire m \Tolunt r on many civic proj cts. campI te disregard of 1115 o~n p .rsonal Ruthrnary Keller Van Kersen '33B safety, Lt. Nelson delivered 1115 o rdm a ~ ce '46BS, Los Angeles, California, ~i d on th e ho tile forces WIth devastati ng May 12 at California Lutheran Hospital. accuracy and was instrumental in reli v­ Los ngeles, after a long illness. ing a viciou "attack upon beleaguered Jam es f. Walter '31 [SAg '33PhD, friendly troops. plant pathologist, died in Nov mber 1967. Allstin D . (T ex) orton '32LLB, Edina, After receiving his PhD, Dr. Walter went Minnesota, died July 3 at age 60. orton, to Morristown, ew Jersey, until 1935. ~s who was an Edina municipal judge from supervisi ng technician in the USDA DIVl­ 1948 to 1952, wa vic president of the sion of For st P a tholo~y. In 1935 h UNIVERSITY OF Edina Good. Government L agu and a became an associatc pathologi t and was past president of 0 e Izaak W a lto~ transferred to Oxford, England, until MINNESOTA SEAL Leagu . After graduatIon from th Um­ 1938. He was promot d to patllologist in CAST IN SOLID BRONZE versity, he taught trial practice at the 1942 and continu d his work for U D Minneapolis-Minn sota ColJ ege of Law a tTe asured remembrance until 1946 wh n he ace pted a position as of college days! from 1947-1952. orton was a cofounder a plant patll010gist at the Gulf. Coa~t Ex­ of the Good Samaritan Methodi t Church periment Station of the Umverslty of The seal of your university with you r name of Edina and served for 12 years on the Florida. Dr. Walt r is th author of mor and class year both cast in eternal, solid bronze. The heavy castings are securely board of trustees of the Minnesota M tho­ than 70 publications and r~eiv d . many dist Conference. mounted on a solid walnut escutcheon. honors, including th e Flonda FrUlt and Ideal as a gift for office wall, den or game Jane Boyd Onne '29-'32, St. Paul, died Vegetable Association Annual Research room. July 13 at age 57. She was a memb r of Award, 1953, and the Distinguished Serv­ BERNTSEN CAST PRODUCTS Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and th ice Award from the Florida Seed me~ 926 Le Roy Road, Madison, Wisconsin St. Paul Junior League. Association, 1966. His work was hiS Dr. Jens PhiUp Pederson '19DDS, hobby, and characterized a. life which ----Please---- send---- me -a--- University------of--- Minnesoll------1 Appleton, Minnesota, died July 7 at age led many to seek his coun~e ll .n reference plaque with the fo ll owing engraving: 75. He was a dentist in the Un.d rwood to th eir research and publ,cations. area for many years prior to hlS forced The follOwing alumni have been re­ I' tirement due to illness in 1952. He also port d d cased: Miss A. II. Aderrna.n '56BA, Shawano, Wise. ; Mrs. W. W. Ar­ held a degree in Mortuary Science from I enclose $'2.95 0 Check the University. Dr. P derson was a .m ~ m­ m entrout '26GDH, Star City, W.Va.; Pleose ship prepoid to: ber of the American Dental AsSOCiation, A. E. Beardmore '2lBSEE, ch nectady, NAME ...... the Minnesota Dental Association, and N.Y.; R. C. Brower '32BA, Altadena, the American Legion Underwood chapter. Calif.; F. R. Calton '34B h mE, Rocky ADD RESS ...... Lawrence P. Silkey '41BME, Hunting­ Ford Colo.; W . C. Cook '22MA, Walla ton, Long Island, died suddenly on Wall~, Wash.; C. H . Daoidson '53BSB, , CITY ...... STATE ...... , Waterville, N.Y.; Miss I-I. C. Earley May 30 at age 56. He had b en m- , ~------LUMNI NEW 38 " ... any man who doesn't believe in life insurance deserves to die once without having any." - WILL ROGERS

*YOU CAN AFFORD MORE PROTECTION . .. BECAUSE IT COSTS LESS. Increase your estate by $10,000 with Group Term Life Insur­ • Generally No Physical Exam .. . usually only the short state­ ance ... once your insurance is effective, cash benefits will be ment of health on the enrollment form is necessary. paid for death at any time, in any place, from any cause­ • Beneficiary .. . you name your own beneficiary, which you aircraft accident, heart attack, auto crash , blood poisoning, may change at any time. Special beneficiary arrangements can pneumonia, etc. be made to fit your own requirements. Settlements of death Amount of Group Semi-Annual claims as a monthly income may be provided. You r Age Insurance" Premium • No Premium To Pay While Disabled .. . your life insurance premiums are waived and insurance remains in force if you 20-24 $10,000 $ 13.00 become totally and permanently disabled (as defined in the 25-29 10,000 16.00 contract) before age 60. 30-34 10,000 20.00 • You May Change ... to a permanent individual policy which 35-39 10,000 26.50 builds cash values for retirement. When you terminate member­ 40-44 10,000 36.00 ship in MAA, when you reach age 70, or when any insurance 45-49 10,000 51.00 terminates because of a change in age beyond age 60, you 50-54 10,000 73.50 may convert your life insurance to any of the individual policy 55·59 10,000 10B.00 forms, except term insurance, issued by the insuring company. 60 and Over (. Amount of insurance reduces by $1000 each IT'S EASY TO ENROLL year after age 60. Premiums furnished on re- 1. Complete Group life Insurance Enrollment Card below. quest.) 2. Mail to: Minnesota Alumni Insurance Administrator • You Are Eligible ... if you are a member of the MAA, age 60 P.O. Box 907, Minneapolis, Minn. 55440 or under, and are either actively employed or are an unem­ 3. Send no money now . .. you will be notified of the ap­ ployed housewife. (Coverage for residents of Texas, Ohio, New proval of your application and will receive your first Jersey, and Wisconsin is not available at this time.) billing from the Administrator.

Statement of Health The following information is submitted as evidence of my insurability: Last Name (Print) First Name Middle Initial Weight Height ______Have you ever been declined or rated for life insurance?__ _ Street Address (If yes, give details below) Within the past five years, have you been confined for more than five days by any illness or injury or undergone any surgical City State Zip Code operations? (If yes, give details below) Are you in good health? ______Comments: Date of Birth Class, or years at U of M

Beneficiary (Print Name as Relationship I hereby apply for that coverage for which I am or may become MARY DOE, not MRS. JOHN DOE) eligible under the above Group Policy issued by The Union Central Life Insurance Company, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201. __ ~ __ X____ ----~~------THE UNION CENTRAL LIFE INSURANCE co. Date Signature By the end of 1968 well probably be the second h!rgest car rental contpany.

Our man in charge of " people people" standa rds.

The way things are going, only one (mostly GM cars) again and again. people as fast as we can without en­ car rental company will have more But it's made us scramble to main­ dangering our high standards. We locations than National at the end tain our "people people" standards. may be No. 2 by the end of 1968, of 1968. To help, we've installed a new in­ but you'll still be No. 1. Making the customer No. 1 paid stant reservations confirmation sys­ off: we grew at twice the rate of our tem. (Like our S & H Green Stamps, competitors last year, nearly doubled our competitors don't have it.) our locations and increased our fleet And we're adding cars and good

National Car Rental. .. the people people.

In Cen8d. end Ihrouahoul the world, II's TILO[N lnlerNATIONAl