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The Alumnus UNI Alumni Association

10-1943

The Alumnus, v27n4, October 1943

Iowa State Teachers College

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Recommended Citation Iowa State Teachers College, "The Alumnus, v27n4, October 1943" (1943). The Alumnus. 172. https://scholarworks.uni.edu/alumnusnews/172

This Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by the UNI Alumni Association at UNI ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Alumnus by an authorized administrator of UNI ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1 THE. ALU. . . ' . . MNUS...... ~,- ,· . ,._. .: HOME ECONOMICS EDUCATION THE PRACTICAL FOR OCTOBER~- t . 1943 ': From All Over th~ World(Come Letters to the Editor .•• See Page Six 'A· Typical of Teachers College "Soldiers of the Schoolroom" this foll as they go out to teach in the pub Iic schools is Old Gold beauty Darlene Wolfe of West Union, who is teaching home economics at the Waterville, Iowa, High School this year. THE ALUMNUS IOWA STATE T EACHERS COLLEGE, CEDAR FALLS, IOWA

c-Jlte CAMPUS TODAY

By MARIAN CLAPPISON

"Chanticleer" Is Summer Play . . . N A SETTING AS FANCIFUL and colorful as I "The Wizard of Oz," "Chanticleer," a poetic drama by Edmund Rostand, was pre­ sented as the annual summer play on July 29 and 30 by the College Players under the ARMY Arn CoRPs MEN STATIONED ON THE direction of Miss Hazel Strayer ... CAMPUS STAND AT ATTENTION IN THE SHADOW Phyllis Reeve, senior from Cedar Falls, head­ OF THE CAM PANILE. ed the all-woman cast as the strutting dictator of the barnyard, Chanticleer. All characters in On the Cover ... Autum n leaves carpet the play were either animals or birds, and the the campus. This scene was ta ken looking cast did an excellent job of portraying the toward the Admin istration Building. different roles .. . The quaint and colorful settings were designed by Esther Oleson, teach­ er in the Waterloo schools, as part of her * workshop class at TEACHERS COLLEGE last In This Issue summer. The Campus Today ______Home Management House ______2 KXEL Is One Year Old ______5 Boost Rural Teachers* Wages . . . Letters to the Editor ______6 Service Me n's Directory ______11 To ATTRACT AND KEEP BETTER qualified Wome n in War ______17 teachers in the field of rural education, Dr. Roll of Honor ______20 D . E. Lindstrom of the department of agricul­ Civilian Soldiers ______2 1 tural economics at the University of Illinois, A lumni News, Marriages, Births, Deaths _ _ _ _ 2 2 advocates paying higher wages to rural teachers than are paid to high school teachers . . . Volume XXV II OCTOBER, 1943 Number 4 Dr. Lindstrom spoke at a convocation at TEACHERS COLLEGE on July 26. Salaries of THE ALUMNUS is entered a s second class mail from $125 to $175 per month are being used at the post office in Cedar Falls, Iowa, with the in some of the Illinois rural schools to attract Iowa State Teachers Co ll ege a s owner of the better teachers to rural education, he stated . .. magazine. As such it is not fo rwardable without extra cost . Without charge to alumni, 17,000 "When the quality of education falls, the copi es are printed and di stributed quarte rl y. Edi­ quality of that country's civilization falls. By torial and technical duties are hondled by the endangering the quality of the rural school edu­ Bureau of Publications. cation we permit reverberations in the postwar George H. Holmes ______Ed itor period which may result in an upsurge of Director, Bureau of Publications irrational anti-social acts," Dr. Lindstrom as­ Marian Clappison ______Managing Editor serted. Marion Mayes ______Alumni News ( Continued on poge eight ) Be njamin Boardman ______Bu si ness Manager Eileen K elleher ( left ) and her sister Lolea ti ( right I confer with Dr. Sutherland about just which coke recipe they should use, wh ile Char­ lotte Curtis, wielding the duste r, l ooks on.

Home Management House-

• A Laboratory In H ome P UTTIN G INTO PRACTICE THE TH EORIES they'd m democratic family living, it taught them bet­ learned in the classroom, five TEACHERS ter management for increased efficiency on the COLLEG E home economic ma1ors had this sum­ "home front." mer an unusual opportunity to get first hand The six-week course met in the home of Dr. practice in the art of making beds and wielding Elisabeth Sutherland, head of the home econ­ dust mops in a new "home management house" omics department, at 921 West Ninth Street, course. and the five who were enrolled literally moved Not only did the course give Charlotte Cur­ in and "took over" the entire household while tis, Eileen and Loleati Kelleher, Beth Lord, and they were there. They assumed full responsibil­ Valeria Knock an opportunity for experience ity for planning, purchasing, budget-making,

Eileen, Loleati, and Charlotte gathered oroun j t he fireplace ... As port of the work in home decorating Charlotte and Eileen a re deciding on just t he rig ht spot for that picture. Shall we have s quash or carrots for suppe r is the ques­ tion of the moment a s the g irls learn that buying fresh fruits and veg etables ce rta inly saves on those precious ration points. At the right, that m ight be a tast y dish of baked b eans that Charlotte is just taking out of the oven.

Economics Education cooking, and other household activities com­ Guests were entertained four times at dinner, mon to all homemakers. and a tea for home economics majors and an When the course was organized, the girls "at home" for faculty and students were held. conferred about the system they would use in the T he special dinner guests, President and Mrs. housekeeping venture. Each took her turn at Malcolm Price, Dean of Women Sadie B. being cook, assistant cook, housekeeper, hostess, Campbell, Professor and Mrs. R. W. Getchell, and guest. The "guest" wasn't allowed to sit and Miss Agnes McClelland, can testify as to around and take things easy, though-during the girls' ability in that important phase of the week that she played that role each girl homemaking-preparing and serving a meal. carried out a special hobby or project such as Says Charlotte Curtis, "It's the most practi­ refinishing a chair or learning to dehydrate cal course I've ever taken in college." (Charlotte foods for preservation. received her B.A. degree with a major in home Dishes, silver, linen, and cooking utensils economics in August, and she's now teaching were brought from the home economics labora­ that subject in the Kanawha, Iowa, High tories on the campus, and each girl who took School.) Her opinion about the value of "home the four-hour course paid the regular $2.00 management house" is shared by the other fout laboratory fee. girls with equal enthusiasm. An estimated 50 cents per person per day The only prerequisite for the course is "meal was allowed for food, and staying within that planning" and a student does not have to be amount and the ration points, too, was no easr a home economics major to enroll. The home task, the girls found. Carrying sack lunches economics department plans to offer it again each day saved a great amount of time and next summer and perhaps during one quarter of energy. the fall, winter, or spring, if it can be arranged.

1941 row A STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Three Football Is Dropped for the Duration at T. C. FooTBALL AT TEACHERS CoLLEGE will be dis­ for a time as a collegiate sport. It was resumed continued for the duration of the war, it has later in the fall as a part of the activity of the been announced by L. L. Mendenhall, director student army training corps. of physical education at the college. For the past three years the Panther foot­ The disbanding last spring of the North Cen­ ball teams have been champions of the North tral Athletic Conference ( of which TEACHERS Central Conference. Many players from the CoLLEGE was a member), and the induction of college are now in training in uniform on the practically every member of both freshman and campuses of former Teachers College football varsity teams into the armed services were fac­ rivals. tors affecting the decision to abandon football. Moreover, the present coaching staff is pre­ Dr. Schneider to New York occupied with the training of the few men stu­ DR. N. 0. SCHNEIDER, director of physical dents left for prospective military service, as education and industrial arts and supervisor of well as in instruction of the large contingent of student teaching in those subjects at the Army air crew students stationed at the col­ TEACHERS CoLLEGE Campus School since 1926, lege. has resigned to accept a position as director of "TEACHERS COLLEGE coaches are all directly the driver's training program for the New York employed in the national war effort," Mr. Men­ state war council. denhall stated in making the announcement of Dr. Schneider has had charge of the driver the discontinuation of football. "Four are training program of the college and the Campus members of the armed forces of the nation, High School and coached football, basketball, while three are now instructors in the special and track at Campus High. With the exception courses for air corps cadets at TEACHERS CoL­ of 1940 when he was completing work on his LEGE and for regular students enrolled in spe­ doctor of education degree at New York Uni­ cial preparatory courses in military science." versity, he has been a member of the Campus Lawrence "Mon" Whitford is now a lieuten­ High School faculty for 17 years. ant in charge of military police at Ft. Custer, As director of the driver training program Michigan; Paul Bender is a lieutenant com­ for the New York state war council, he will mander in physical education work at Bain­ have charge of setting up institutes and training bridge, Maryland; Coach 0. M. Nordly is a leaders for the driver's training program. He lieutenant in the Navy Pre-flight School in assumed his duties there September 10. Iowa City; while Dave McCuskey, formerly with the pre-flight school at Iowa City, is now Compete in Track Events with the United States Naval Air Station 111 ALTHOUGH TEACHERS CoLLEGE had no track Olathe, Kansas, as a lieutenant instructor in team last spring, Ralph Tritsch and Charles physical education. Silvy, representing the college, took part in Mr. Mendenhall and coaches C. L. "Buck" two A. A. U. track meets, one at Kansas City, Starbeck and A. D. Dickinson are engaged in Missouri, and the other at Chicago. full-time work teaching military science and The Chicago meet was the one in which physical fitness courses, as well as in physical Gunder Haegg competed and took place at training for Army air corps cadets regularly Soldier's Field before 23,000 spectators. In it, stationed on the campus. Tritsch placed second in the high hurdles. The giving up of football for serious military At the Kansas City meet, Tritsch took first pursuits is not new to Teachers College. Dur­ place in both the high and low hurdles. Silvy ing the fall of 1918, football was discontinued placed second in the 5,000 meter dash.

Page Four THE ALUMNUS October From the studios of KXEL where he is shown with Herbert V. Hoke, Josh Higgins, the famous rural philosopher, is again broadcasting this fall.

"Teachers College of the Air" Is One Year Old

New Fall Broadcast Features Josh Higgins

LIMAXING A YEAR OF EDUCATIONAL service of events in the lives of TEACHERS COLLEGE C to thousands of listeners all over the men now in service, is presented every other United States, KXEL, the 50,000 watt "IowA Tuesday. Scripts based upon letters from STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE of the Air," cele­ service men were written by Dr. H. A. Riebe, brated its first birthday in July. military adviser for the college. In addition to the broadcasts Friday nights Joe DuMond, creator of the famous rural at 10: 30 and at 1: 30 every day except Sunday, philosopher, Josh Higgins, attended TEACHERS a new half-hour on the air was added this COLLEGE in 1918, 1920, and 1921. He has September to the KXEL schedule. Josh been active in radio work for 15 years, begin­ Higgins, who is really Joe DuMond, president ning as manager of WMT and later appear­ and manager of the Josh Higgins broadcasting ing over NBC from New York and Chicago corporation of which KXEL is the radio outlet, as an actor and song-writer. His character, returned to the air on the new program. Josh Higgins, has appeared in 4,000 broad­ In its first year on the air from the TEACH· casts, and 2,250 of these have originated over ERS CoLLEGE campus, KXEL has broadcast the NBC hookup. a great variety of educational and entertaining programs. With the coming of the WAYES The Josh Higgins character is built around , and the Army air crew students to the campus, the fictional personality who lives in Finchville Finchford, a small town north both groups were given time each week for a which is actually of Cedar Falls. variety show. Forums, musical programs by faculty and students, story hours-all had their Herbert V. Hake, assistant professor of place on the "TEACHERS COLLEGE of the air." speech at TEACHERS COLLEGE, is coordinator "The Student in Wartime," a dramatization and director of KXEL activities.

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Five f ; ------

From Tunisia To Texas Come

From Teachers College alumni all over done, and so we might as well get at it." the world come such letters as these, . .. I know it is hot at T. C., but here it proudly telling of the birth of a son, of goes over life in an Army camp, or a marriage, or 100 and is dry heat with no let up­ a death, or just a change of address. plus hot, dry sand in your eyes, nose, and We'd like to hear from you, too, so sit mouth. Dressed up in heavy Army clothes, leg­ down today and write your "Letter to the gings, full field packs and rifles, it gets really Editor." rugged. .. . On the whole I've made up my mind He's Pvt. John E. Carey* , U. S. Army, now I'm going to work with the Army and let it instead of Jack Carey, editor of THE CoLLEGE do me all the good it can-and it certainly can. EYE .• • . .. Well, I've gotta make a ''deadline" to Dear Gang: I've been jiving pretty good with go to evening class-yes, we have 'em here. I this outfit since the 17th of June when I was have to meet 10 or 12 deadlines a day, worse inducted. I was in a hurry and so I didn't take than that old Wednesday night deal. Best of the two weeks furlough allowed draftees. I'm luck, PvT. JoHN E. CAREY, '42-'43. not in that hurry any more . . . The day I stepped into the U. S. Army uniform, I ac­ H e reads other people's* l etters . .. Now here's tually fe lt myself grow taller and larger. I one from him ... was pretty proud. Dear Mr. Holmes: My copy of THE ALUM­ But after that I found there is another side NUS came today, and to a censor accustomed of this life of the citizen soldier. It isn't pleas­ to reading other people's woes, it was a great ant to have your entire mode of living jerked boon. I thoroughly e njoyed n ews of T. C. away and replaced by such absolute discipline and all those I knew closely and by acquaint­ as the Army has. Don't get the impression that ance. I'm "fighting" the Army. I've learned that a ... THE ALUMNUS caught up with me guy can be very reasonably happy if he just quickly, 'though the address it bore was a bit adapts himself to conditions. I just tell my­ old. I've moved a bit since my address was self this when I get a command, "It's gotta be last sent to Mr. Fuller's office. At present I

Page Six THE ALUMNUS October am a second lieutenant in the Army, unassigned men who have so cheerfully given up their to any particular branch. freedom as civilians to preserve that very right Last May 19 I completed a specialized for the rest of us. Our school rooms will be officer's training course in military censorship free from the terrors of bombs as long as we and received my commission ... Since that have these brave· men to protect us. time I've been stationed in as Keep THE ALUMNUS coming! As much an Army base censor at the port of embarka_- as it is appreciated in peace time, it is doubly tion in New York. In that time I've run acrost1 so now. Sincerely, NINA RIETZ HEATHER· letters of friends and acquaintances several SHAW. (Ru. '29) times in my routine of "open-read-pass-and * seal, and have been pleased to find that all are' The story of a hat, not just an ordinary hat, well and active in the service. · :.i~ either ... This comes from Bolivia, South ... A few personal items which seem to , America ... have escaped the watchful eye of THE ALUM­ Dear Sir: Through various routes, THE NUS. I was married on May 18, 1942, to · ALUMNUS seems to catch up with me, much Maezene B. Wamsley of Greene, Iowa, and to my enjoyment. A couple of weeks ago, the we now are proudly watching the growth and consul from Cochabamba came to Guayara­ development of a daughter, Frances Anne, merin on a visit, and he brought the April copy born on May 19, 1943-the same date I was down to me. That issue had worked its way commissioned. I flew home from Washington here after three months of traveling via rail, for the event, but the stork must have borrowed boat, and finally air. The January issue foi­ a P-38, and he won. lowed be up into the Andes where I was three Keep THE ALUMNUS coming! It'll be months ago with my husband who was then a big help overseas. I'll send along my APO making a typhus survey of various mines. (He address as soon as I get it. Best wishes, GENE is •a bacteriologist for the health and sanitation BOVE E. (B.A. '39) division of the office of the coordinator of inter-American a ff airs.) It mak es me both proud* and sad ... from I thought that a story of how LoRN A Rowan, Iowa . .. STEWART (Com'!. '39) had acquired the most Dear Alumnus: The July copy of THE highly valued hat in Bolivia might be interest­ ALUMNUS arrived today, and I have enjoyed ing to THE ALUMNUS. It is only an reading it very much. The long list of boys ordinary tall white hat that every Quecha in the service makes me very proud, but also Indian woman wears here, but it has on it the sad. My brother's name, that of PAUL RIETZ , autographs of Vice-President Wallace and appears in the list, and I wish to make a cor ­ many of the high-ranking dignitaries of Bolivia. rection as to his address now. The story is almost as interesting as the Paul, who was a music student during 1940 fact. When Mr. Wallace visited Cochabamba and 1941, successfully completed his course as three months ago, many things were prepared an aviation cadet and was graduated from the in his honor. For weeks his portrait was dis­ Army Air School at Roswell, New Mexico, on played in almost every store window. The April 17, 1943. He was commi,sioned a second town was beautified for days before his arrival, lieutenant and is a bombardier, one of the and even the roads he would travel were re­ "most dangerous men in the world." graded. (The Servicio had been trying for He is now stationed in Roswell and is at­ months to get the road to Calacala-the suburb tending instructors' school, taking an intensive where several of us live-fixed but to no avail. course preparatory to the teaching of naviga­ Then, Mr. \X'allace came, and crews of work­ tion. men worked 24 hours a day putting it in shape Of course, I am very proud of him, and feel for him to ride over.) that I have a right to be. I salute all of the ( Continued on page fourteen )

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Seven With the changing colors of autumn, many other changes hove come to the campus. There's no football team to cheer on to victory this fall, but Celestine Paule's smile is for the future and the biggu victory ahead.

with the U nited States Children's Bureau, and THE CAMPUS TODAY J . M . H ayek, direc tor of the division of ma­ ( Continued from poge one) ternal and child health of the state department of health. Child Health Workshop . .. MoRE THAN 30 PUBLIC HEALTH and school Ruth Suckow Lectures* nurses and teachers attended the Child Health N ovELS BY THEODORE DR EISER, \Villa Workshop held at TEACHERS COLLEGE from Cather, Ellen Glasgow, and Howard Fast were August 2 to 14, designed to provide instruction discussed this summer in a series on "America regarding factors affecting the health of school in the Contemporary N ovel" presented by the children and to stimulate cooperative planning department of English .. . Highlights of the for use of available health resources . . . series were lectures by Ruth Suckow, famous Vivian V. Dren~khahn, senior specialist in American novelist on "What Is a Story?" and nutrition with the United States Office of Joseph Warren Beach of the department of Education, was the director of the workshop, English at the University of Minnesota whose which was sponsored jointly by the Iowa State subject was "Collectivist Trends in American Department of Health and TEACHERS COLLEGE Novels of This Year." ... Among those who were on the staff were Jessie M. Parker, state superintendent of public Visiting Opera Star *. instruction; Dr. William Sadler, nationall7 SELECTIONS RANGING FROM "Begin the Be­ known psychiatrist from Chicago; Jane Nichol­ guine" to "La Calunnia" from "The Barber of son, consultant in maternal and child health Seville" were presented by John Gurney, Metro .

Page Eight THE ALUMN US October politan Opera bass-baritone in a concert in the Miss Spooner to Stephens . . . auditorium at TEACHERS COLLEGE on July 24 Miss CATHERINE SPOONER, social and per­ ... Formerly leading man in the ZiegfelJ sonnel director at TEACHERS CoLLEGE for Follies, Gurney sang this summer at most of three years, has resigned to take a position the same schools where he appeared ten years as director of the freshman ago in July ... His appearance was arranged girls' residence hall at Steph­ by the lecture-concert committee headed by Dr. ens College, Columbia, Mis­ Leland Sage. souri ... A graduate of TEACHERS COLLEGE in 1939, Becomes Professor-Emeritus* Miss Spooner received her JoHN R. SLACKS, associate professor of rural M.A. degree in student per­ education, has retired from active teaching duty sonnel administration at Co­ College in to become professor emeritus after 15 years of Miss Spooner lumbia Teachers service on the TEACHERS 1940 ... CoLLEGE faculty .. . Replacing her as social director of the Mr. Slacks has served as Commons is Miss Elizabeth Emerson, formerly sponsor of the Rural Teach­ music teacher at Newton, Iowa ... She re­ ers Club and is the author ceived her B.A. degree from TEACHERS CoL- of "The Rural Teacher; LEGE in 1938. Work," a book which has been widely used in normai 194 Are Graduated *August 19 ... Professor Slacks schools and junior colleges A TOTAL OF 194 STUDENTS received degrees, throughout the Middlewest .. Before be­ diplomas, and certificates at the 1943 summer coming a member of the TEACHERS COLLEGE commencement held on August 19 and heard an faculty in 1918, he served as county superin­ address by Dr. Robert Bell Browne, director of tendent of schools in Sac County for ten years the University of Illinois extension service and .. . He received both his B.A. and M.A. de­ summer session and head of the National Uni­ grees at the University of Chicago after re­ venity Extension association. ceiving the B.Di. degree from the lowA STATE The list of graduates included 91 who re­ NoRMAL ScHOOL in 1901 . .. He will con ­ ceived the bachelor of arts degree, 27 who were tinue part-time instruction in the department of awarded the elementary teacher diploma, 29 rural education. who completed the work for the kindergarten­ primary teacher diploma, 36 who qualified for It's Seerley Boulevard* Now .. the four-quarter rural certificate, and 11 who You can't turn off Main Street on 24th any completed the one-year curriculum for rural more to reach the college for the simple reason teachers. that there isn't a 24th Street any more. It The Reverend Paul Brown of Jesup, who has been renamed Se~rley Boulevard in honor received the B.A. degree from TEACHERS CoL­ of the former president of the college. LEGE in 1926, delivered the invocation at the The movement to rename the street was commencement exercises. Special violin music started when the Cedar Falls Rotary Club was provided by Lois Miller, graduating senior presented a petition to the city council. Children from Eldora. of the late President Seerley have written friends in Cedar Falls expressing their appre­ Miss Anne Duncan *Resigns ciation of the honor given their father. Those Mrss ANNE STUART DUNCAN, head librarian expressing their gratitude were Dr. Clem Seer­ for the TEACHERS COLLEGE library for 30 years, ley, Bozeman, Mont.; Mrs. Esther Culley, Le­ resigned her post effective with the end of the Mars, Iowa, and Mrs. Helen S. Clark, Palo summer and has retired from library work. Alto, Calif. ( Continued on page nineteen )

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Nine Scenes like this, a part of last year's Hobo Day Service. Neither are college officials scheduling and Homecoming celebration, will be only mem­ other major events for the entire year in advance, ories this fall. In view of all of the circumstances, the president has stated. Under t he chairmanship the traditional Homecoming events and the foot­ of Dr. Leland Sage, the lecture-concert committee ball game have been cancelled, according to an announcement by President Malcolm Price and is arranging a series of entertaining programs, but A. C. Fuller, director of the Bureau of Alumni the entire schedule is not yet complete.

Page T en THE ALUMNUS October Here's the third installment of the Myron L. Begeman, '09-'1 2, Lieut. Col. , A n ny, Teachers College Service Men's Direc­ Ordna nce P rovin g Grounds, Hope, A rk. tory, being compiled by the Bureau of Ge ne Beil ke, ' 41-'43, Army. Alumni Service. This installment in­ Russell Bell, ' 33-'36, Army. cludes names which have been added to Cyri l Bell ock, "38-'42, A rmy, Med. Corps, Camp the list of men in service since the July Grant, I ll. issue of THE ALUMNUS, changes of Harold vV. Benda, B.A. '34, Coast Guard, Sp. address, and corrections to the April and 1/ c T ( R ) . Government I sland, Bks. N o. 8, July lists. Ala 111 eda, Cali f. Alumni are asked to cooperate with Paul F . Bender, fa culty, L ieut. Commdr., Navy, the Bureau of Alumni Service in sub­ U .S.N.T.S., Bainbrid ge, Md. mitting new names, additions, and cor­ Albert Benedetti, '41-'43, Navy, Korthwesl rections. Use the news blank on page 32. S.T.C. . Maryvill e, Mo. Cha rl es Bennett, '39-'43, a ir corps resen ·e. ~ Albert H. Berg. B.S. '31, A r 111 y. J ack Berg, '39-'41, Army, A-S. 17082286, Sqdn. A ll6, F lt. C., A.A.B., Santa A na, Calif. Jack l\L Althouse, '37-'39, L ieut., Na,·y. R ichard Bergstrom, B. A. '38, l\avy, Aeroo- raph­ Everett D . Alton, B.A. '39, L ieut., A rmy. er· s 111 ate 3 / c, K odiak, Alaska. T-2008, No. 7, Country C lub Area, Ft. Mon­ H oward Bidne, '39-'43, Army. mouth, N.J. J. Arnold B idne, B.A. '39, Cpl. , Army, APO Ralph Andres, '42, Armed Forces. -t 70, Ca mp Claiborne, L a. E ldon Archamba ult, '40-'43, Army A ir Corps. H ubert Bierba um, ' 41-'43, Army. Cli fford A rcher, B.A. '20, Maj., A rmy, S .. R. P ., Robert Bigler, '39-'41, H dq. Co., APO 3-t, P os~- \Va shington a nd L ee U niv .. L exin gton, Va. 111 aster, N . Y. V ictor Argotsinger, '39-'43, Army. Ra lph E. B irchard. B.A. '37, Cpl. , Ar111y. Ja mes G. A rmstrong, '35-'37, Army. 374 18650, A P O 79, Nashville, T enn. \ Vayne Arthur, ' 41, Armed Forces. \Vill iam Birenbaum, '41-'43, Army. -ick \V. Avelc has, '40-'42, M.R.T. C., Camp vVillia m D. B lack, B.S. '37, L ieut. , Army, APO Barkeley, Tex. 258, Camp Polk, L a. rmy, A.S.T.P., Ray Azeltin e, '24-'26, L ieut., A Merle E. Bla i1· , ' 41-'42, Army. Pasadena Jr. Coll. , Pasadena, Calif. Richa rd B loomer, ' 40-'43, A rmy. B D ona ld H. Blue. B. S. '38, Ens., U .S.N .R, c. ., R ansom B ail ey, B.A. '36, Pvt. , A rmy, COA F leet Postoffi ce, N.Y. 34th B n., M .R.T.C., Pn. l , Camp Barkeley, Russell Blumeyer, '41-"43, Army. T ex. Daniel R. Bock, A rmy Air Corps, N .C.O. John J . Baird, '38-'41, L ieut., Army, P ortland, P .T .I.S., 43-5 Sq. G, B.T.C. No. 4, :Mi ami O re. Beach, F la. Meh·in Baker, '38-'43 , air corps reserve. E mil vV. Bock, fa cul ty, Army. R icha rd E. Baker, '42, Navy. F rederi c \V. Bohning, B. A. '37, P vt., Army, Ronald Baker, ' 42-'43, Army, A.S.T.P., O hio T roop C-1, S qd. C. R.T.C., Ft. R il ey, Kan. U niv., Athen s, O hio. H erbert Boies, '41-'43, Army. Robert M. Barnett, '42-'43, N avy, V-12 T r. U nit. A rthur J. Boose, '38-'41, P fc. , A rmy Air Corps, Gustavus Adolphus Coll. , S t. P eter, Minn. Harding F ield, La. J ohn A. Barrigar, B.A. '42, Army. E ugene C. Bovee, B.A. '39, L ieut., Army, Cen­ DaYi d Barry, '40-'43, Army, C o. A., Bn. 3 , Pn. 1, sor, 40 W . 74th, N . Y. E .R.T.C., F t. Belvoir, Va. J ohn Bartholow, ' 41-'43, Navy, Northwest K eith E . Bowen, B.A. '43, E ns., U .S.N.A.S., S.T.C. , M a ryville, Mo. Room 7 54, B. 135 1, H oll ywood, F la. \ ,V in fo 1'·d Beer, 41 -'42, Army Air Cadet, Santa R ichard \V. Bowen, '40-'43, Army Air Corps, Ana, Ca lif. Boca Raton, F la.

194J rowA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Eleven Morris K. Boyd, '39-'43, Navy, Northwest Calvi n L. Chase, B .A. '39, Army A ir Corps, S.T.C., Maryvill e, Mo. A.A.F.T .T.C., K earns, U tah. Corlis D. Boylan, ' 37, Army. Richard Cherny, '31-'32, 2nd L ieut., Army, Lorne M. Boylan, B.A. '29, Army, Psychology Camp Lee, Va. Dept., Armed Forces Induction Sta., Camp J . A . Chesnut, B.A. '34, Navy, N.R.S., 4 17 W. Dodge, Iowa. I 18th St., N.Y. Earn est Brande nburg, B.A. '37, L ieut. (jg), Monte Christensen, B.A. '38, L ieut., A rmy. Navy, % F leet Postmaster, N. Y. J . Woodrow Christianson, '39-'43, Navy. J ohn A. Brin dley, B.A. '33, E ns. , Navy, ~av:r Kenneth Church, '40-'43, Marines, Vllestern Pre-fli g ht Sch., Iowa City, Iowa. Mich. Coll. of E el ., Kalamazoo, Mich. Robert Brindley, '39-'42, Army, O.C.S., F t. Sill , G. N. Churchill, B.A. '30, C.P.O., N avy, U.S. Okla. N.T.S., Brokaw H a ll , Appleton, Wis. Stephen C. Bronson, '34-'35, Army. George Clark, '39-'43, Army A ir Corps, Sqcl n. Everett G. Brower, B.S. '39, Army, a/ c, Sq. 11 , 9-B, 2nd A.A.F. F.T.D., Santa Ana, Cali f. Group C., A.A.F ., O .C.S., Miami Beach, F la. Robert L. Clark, B.A. '37, A rmy A ir Corps, J ohn D. Brown, '35-'3 7, E ns., Navy, aviation 1070 G lendon Ave., Apt. 40 5, West Los An­ sp. serv. officer. geles, Cali f. Robert A. Brown. B .A. '34, Lieut. ( jg), Navy, Russell L. Clarke, B.S. '36, Army A ir Corps, BOQ 805 , R247, N .A.A.T.C., Jacksonvill e, Miami Beach, Fla. Fla. H arvey Clemmensen, ' 42-'43, Navy, Northwest Walter E. Brown, B.A. '38, Capt., Army, Aca­ S.T.C., Maryville, Mo. demic Dept. Inf. Sch., F t. Benning, Ga. Robert Clow, '42-'43, A rmy A ir Corps. W illiam J . B ucher, B.A. '38, P fc., Army, 480 Julian F . Colby, B.A. '37, A rmy. Bomb Sqcln ., Baton R ouge, Avon P k. , F la. Dwane R. Collins, B.A. '31 , Psychologica l Re­ Donald Buckmaste1·, '38-'39, Marin es. search U nit No. 3, S.A.A.A.B., Santa Ana, E ugene Bundy, '38-'41, Navy, Roberts H all , Calif. ; 2479 Eldon St., Costa Meso, Cali f. Room 234 G. Austin 18, Tex. W ill is Colville, '40-'43, Marines, Western Mich. _Tames G. Burke, '4 1, Cpl. , Army A ir Corps, Coll. of E el ., Kalamazoo, Mich. Richmond, Va. Ja mes Connell , '36-'39, E ns., Navy. Cyril Cranny, B.S. '39, Army. C H iram F . Cromer, B .S. '29, C.P.O., Navy, % Russel C. Calkins, '39-'42, A.A.F.T.S., 65·l F leet Postmaster, N. Y. T.T.S., B ks. 11 22, Sioux Fall s, S.D . J ohn F. Cross, B.A. '40, A rmy, Dept. of Guns, Lavene Camarata, '41-'43, Marines, Kalamazoc, F iring Section, Bldg. 714, A.A.A. Sch., Camp Mich. Davis, N. C. Robert Canny, '40-'41 , E ns., Navy. T heodore C ross, '39-43, Pfc., Army, 171 I 1597. John E . (.Tack) Carey, '42-'43, Pvt., A rmy, Co. A.S.T . U nit 3700, Co. G., U niv. of Minn., D., 67th Bn. , B.I.R.T.C., Camp Fannin, T ex Minneapoli s, Minn. W right Carl son, B .A. '42, Armed Forces. Ca rl D. Carmichael, B.A. '42, L ieut., Army; D 396th Bomb Gr., A.A.B., Moses Lake, W ash. Jim Dagon, ' 41-'42, air corps, State Teachers La Vern E. Carpenter, B.S. '39, Army. Coll., Terre H aute, Ind. Ca rlt P hillip V. Carroll , '3 5-'37, Army, 32715951 , M.C. on M. Dailey, B.A. '38, Army, Sqcln . 6, Tech En!. T rnspt. Det. , B rookl yn A.A.B., Brook­ . Sch. S q., A.A.F., Grand Rapids, Mich. lyn, N .Y. Dwig ht Davis, B.A. '41 , Army. J Melvin Case, B.A. '37, Pvt.. Army, 37657 102. ohn D. Davis, '42-'43, Pvt., Marines, R.D.M.C. 13, APO 402-S, % Postmaster, Nashvill e, Tenn. San D iego, Calif. Dennis M. Casey, '40-'42, S/ Sgt., Army, Ft. Wayne Davis, '40-'43, Navy. Custer, M ich. Jim E. Day, '39-'43, Army. Paul Caslavka, B.S. '35, Navy, A.S., Reg. 5, John Day, B.A. '27, A rmy, APO 454, H q. Btry., U.S.N.T.S., Camp Scott, Farragut, Idaho. 870 F.A. Bn., Camp Robinson, A rk. Don C. Charl es, B.A. '41 , Lieut., Army, 1st Bn .. Lawrence E . Dennis, B.A. '40, E ns., N avy, San 38th A.R., Camp C haffee, Ark. F rancisco. J ohn F. Charl es, B.A. '41 , Lieut. ( jg), Glenview James L. Despain , B.A. '36, Army. N.A.B., 922 Main St., E vanston, Ill. Charles H. Dierenfi elcl , ' 42-'43, Army. Harold E. Charter, B.A. '37, Cpl., A rmy, 419th Leslie V. D ix, B.A. '30, Maj., Army, Camp M c­ Engr. Co., D.T ., Camp C laiborne, La. Coy, Wis.

Page T welve THE ALUMNUS October Maynard Dix, '33-' 35, Lieut., Anny (overseas). G Meredith N. Dix, B.A. '39, Navy, U.S.N.S., A rthur F. Gaffey, B.A. '39, Lieut., Army, Let- McAlester, Okla. terman Ge n. Hosp., San Francisco. Henry J. Dodson, '35-'41, Capt., Army Air Roger M. Galloway, B.A. '35, Ens., Navy. Corps. Jack Geick, '40-'43, Army. Leland J. Dolan, B.A. '33, 2nd Lieut., Army, Glenn R. Gerdes, B.A. '43, Marines, Western Field Art., Ft. Sill, Okla. Mich. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Thomas L. Donnelly, '27-'29, Lieut. Col., 783rd Dean Gilbert, '41-'43, air corps rese rve. MP Bn. (Z/I), Ft. Niagara, N. Y. William Girsch, '39-'43, air corps reserve. Lloyd V. Douglas, faculty, Navy. Louis E. Glaza, '38-'39, S/ Sgt., Army Air Corps, Milton Dove, B.A. '31, Lieut., Army, 234 New (overseas). Dorp, Staten I sland 6, New York. Lyle C. Graber, B.A. '38, 2nd Lieut., Army, Roger L. Downing, B.A. '39, Army. Camp Hulen, Tex. Milton L. Dowden, B.A. '32, Lieut. (Chaplain), Robert W. Grant, '33-'35, Lieut., Army. Harvard Univ. Don E. Green, '39, A.R.T. 2/ c, Navy, Section Albert L. Drake Jr., '39, Sgt., Army, A.A.B., H, Fleet Air Det., N.A.S., Clinton, Okla. India. K enneth N. Griffin, '42, Army. E Howard Easter, B.A. '39, Army Air Corps. H Selman Field, Monroe, La. Robert Hadenfelt, '39-'43 , Marines, Western Marvin E. Easter, '42-'43, Army. Mich. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Stanley Ebel, '42-'43, Navy, I.S.C .. Ames, Iowa. Lauren Hagge, '42-'43, Marines, Western Mich. Bill L. Eells, '42-'43, Army, Camp Polk, La. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Lynn Milford E ll is, '42-'43, Army, Btry. C., Rudolph C. Haglund, '42-'43, Army. 784th AAA Bn. (A.W.), Ft. Bliss, Tex. vVallace Hainline, '38-'39, Navy Air Corps. Richard J. Elwood, B.A. '42, Ens., Navy Air Robert C. Hansen, '42-'43, air corps reserve. Corps. Harland H. Hanson, B.A. '31, Lieut. (jg), D-V James B. Ericson, '40-'42. avy, Northwest (S), A.S.W.I.S., Bldg. 5, avy Ya rd, Boston, S.T.C., Maryville, Mo. Mass. Kenneth M. Erwin, B.S. '36, C. Sp., F.A.W., Randall C. Hart, B.A. '35 , Ens., Navy, Am­ 7 Hqs. Sqd., % Fleet Postoffice, N. Y. phibious Branch (overseas). David B. Hawk, B.A. '40, Armed Forces. F Rex B. Hazen, '40-'41, Lieut., Army, Co. A., \,Villiam B. Fagan, '38-'40, Marines, Officer's APO 776, % Postmaster, N. Y. Trng. John A. Healy, B.S. '39, Armed Forces. Max B. Ferguson, B.A. '39, Lieut., Army, Gail F. Hein, '42-'43, Marines, Western Mich. 0-856016, APO 4505, % Postmaster, Sar, Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Francisco. Dale Heinz, '41-'42, Ens., Navy Air Corps, New John Ferring, ' 34-'35, E ns., Naval Air Corps. Orleans, La. Robert Ferris, '41-'43, Army Air Corps, 70th Robert H . Henry, B.A. '36, Armed Forces. Coll. Tr. Det., Albion Coll., Albion, Mich. Jerry B. Hogan, '42, Army, A.A.F. Trng. Det. Robert Findley, '42-'43, Army. 25, Beta House, Univ. of Va., Charlottesville, Howard J. Finn, B.A. '41, Army. Va. Robert Flaherty, '34-'36, Capt., Marines, M.A.B., Donald F. Howard, B.A. '31, Army. El Toro, Calif. Ralph G. Hoxie, B.A. '40, 2nd Lieut .. Army Air Mark Flanders, '42-'43, Army Air Corps, East Corps, Public Relations Dept. Lansing, Mich. Wirt P . Hoxie, '33-'34, Ens., Navy. Gerald D. Foss, B.A. '40, Lieut., Army, APO Jack (John C.) Hoyt, ' 41-'42, Mechant Marine. 259, % Postmaster, Los Angeles, Calif. George Hughes, '35-'38, Lieut., Army Engr. George Foster, '40-'43, Navy, Northwest S.T.C .. Corps, (overseas) . Maryville, Mo. Howard Hug hes, B.A. '27, Lieut., Army, Co. B., Rex Foster, '42-'43, Navy, Murray Coll., Mur­ 7th Bn., 3d Reg., Camp Wheeler, Ga. ray, Ky. John F. Hughes, '35-'36, Cpl., Army, 380 Hq. & Archie Frye, '40-'43, Marines, Western Mich. A.B. Sqdn., Avon Pk., F la. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Arnold W . Hunger, '34-'36, 2nd Lieut., Army Graydon T . Fuller, '42-'43, Army, Hq. 3rd Bn , Air Corps. 86th Inf.. Camp Hale, Colo. Robert P. Hunt, B.A. '41, 2nd Lieut., Army Air Leroy Furry, B.A. '35, Army. Corps.

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Thirteen yea rs, and this number is the best I have ever LETTERS TO THE EDITOR received. ( Continued from poge seven ) I sincerely congratulate you. I was one oi the first to enter the Iowa State Normal School, In addition, a huge party was planned for and ·Mr. Harwood and I graduated in the him at the Club Social, but a party to which class of 1879 and were married in 1880 at only the men were invited. It so happened that Cedar Falls by President Gilchrist. Lorna lived across the street in rooms over­ After the many years, and the many, many looking the club. And, naturally many of the changes, the interest in the institution and thP. wives gathered there for a chat that evening. sacred memories are dearer to me as the years T he privileged husbands-all the American pass, and I eagerly look forward to the time men were invited-wandered back and forth for the next ALUMNUS. from the wives to the club, reporting various Again I congratulate you and earnestly wish happenings, so that we could keep up with you continued success. I am the party. wondering if I am not the oldest living graduate of that class. During the evening someone had picked up I am 85 years old. Very truly, JENNIE MA CY Lorna's hat, which she had been using for a HARWOOD, (El. '79) . guest-log. Then, he decided that the vice­ president might like to see an Indian hat and wore it across to the club. But on the way * over, he had a change of ideas, and instead of On the home front . .. She's doing her part. showing the hat, he asked Mr. Wallace if he too . .. would autograph it. Mr. Wallace was glad to. The Bolivians, seeing an Indian hat in the Dear Editor: I thought my many college friends club for the first time in its history, somehow might like to know what has become of me, so formed the idea that the hat was being pre­ I'll write you a line. sented to the vice-president. And they eagerly Since last February 18, I have been working lined up to add their names to those alreadv on the production line at there. the Rock Island Arsenal. The hat wa :; returned to Lorna, covered with I aspired to rhe WAACS., autographs. When the ownership of the hat but alas, I was too old, so was learned later, she began receiving numer­ I did the next best thinr, ous offers, ranging to over $100, to sell the hat. enlisted in the WOWs But Lorna has refused all offers, and the and have been doing pre­ hat still decorates her room in Cochabamba. cision grinding in the light Lorna, incidentally, is secretary for the Rubber arms department at the Development Corporation of Bolivia. arsenal. We work on all Please change my address from Chapel Hill, parts of 50 and 30 caliber North Carolina, to c/ o Consulado de EE. UU., machine guns. Cochabamba, Bolivia. Sincerely yours, SARA While the work has HIGBY PEASLEY, (B.A. '34). proven most Mrs. White interesting and educational, yet, it is rather hard for a woman. I shall teach again And from California * ... We appreciate let­ in the fall. I've signed up for the fourth and ters like this . . . fifth grades at Buffalo, Iowa. I'm enclosing Dear Mr. Holmes: The postman gave me the a snap,;hot of myself dressed as all women are last number of THE ALUMNUS this morn­ required to dress when working in war plants. ing, and I have read it with great interest. Your, very truly, MRs. DoRA D. WHITE. I have received THE ALUMNUS for many (Cons. '32)

Page Fourteen THE ALUMNUS October Kay L eonard Kober, '36-'38, A rmy. W ill iam H. Koll, '41-'43, Army, Camp McCain, Marc Ihm, B.S. '35 , Armed Forces. M iss. Roger G. I saacson, B.A. '41, a/ s, Qts. 7, 100th Karl J. K utish, '38-'39, S.K. 2/ c, Marines, % Coll. Tr. Det., Kan. St. Coll. , Manhattan, Kan. F leet Postoffice, San Francisco. Carlton H . I sley, B.S. '26, Lieut., U.S.N.R., N .A.T.T.C. . 1638 Nether wood Ave., Memphis, L T enn. J Edward C. Lambert, B,A. '33, E ns., Navy. Keith Lambertson, B.S. '41, E ns., Naval A ir L eonard J anssen, '40-'43, air cor ps reserve. Corps, F lt. Insti-. , N .A.B., Corpus Christi, Milo N. J ensen, '37-'42, air corps. Tex. J ohn Jindrich, '39-'43, Army. Tom Lamke, B.A. '37, ·Army, T / 4, v\1a shing­ Richard J ohann, '41, A rmy. ton, D.C. George S. J ohnson, B.A. '29, Instr., Army, 4229 Bernard J. Larsen, "40-'41, Army E ngr. Corps, Villa Nova, Houston, Tex. Camp M cCain, Miss. Frank J ohn son, B.A. '22, Med. Adm. Corps. Harold T. Larsen, '39-'40, Cpl. , Army, Hamil­ Leevern R. Johnson, B.A. '39, bookkeeper, No. ton F ield, Calif. 94, C.P.S., Trenton, N. D. Craig Larson, '4 1-'43, air corps reserve. Loy C. J ohn son, B.A. '41, Cpl. , Army, 37426375. Richard T . Lattin, B.A. '42. Ens., U.S.N.R., % 14th A cad. Sqdn., 5th Sch. Gr., Chanute F ield . F leet P ostoffice, San F rancisco. Ill. E ugene W. L eVine, '41-'43, Pvt., Army, Russell J ohnson, '41-'43, Marines, Vlestern 37670854, Hq. Btry., 784th A.A.A. (A.W.) M ich. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. E n., Ft. Bliss, Tex. C. T. J ohnsten, B.A. '30, Lieut. (jg), Navy, Lionel L ieberman, '38-'41 , Army (overseas). N .A.N.S., H ollywood, Fla. Roy A. L ieurance, B.A. '30, 2nd Lieut., Aca­ David Jones, '41-'43 , Army Air Corps. demic Dept., \ i\/ ing 2, Maxwell Field, Mont­ Paul R. J ones, B.S. '38, Lieut., U .S.M.C., % gomery, Ala. Fleet Postoffice, San Francisco. Emil J. L imback, '37-'38, Pvt., U.S.M.C., Pit. Richard J ones, '42-'43, Marines, W estern Mich. 397. R.D.M.C.B., San D iego, Calif. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Aaron L in n, '39-'43, A rmy, Camp Wheeler, Ga. J ames R. Jordan, B.A. '39, Army. E lwin R. L indsey, '41-'43 , Pvt., Army A ir Donald W . Jurgerneyer, '39-'40, Pfc., Army. Corps, T .D., A .A.F.T.T .C., Sqdn. C., U niv. of Ore., E ugene, Ore. K Henry A. Loats, B .S. '38, Ens., Navy. Robert R. Kadesch, B.A. '43 , Navy. R obert L orenzen, '42-'43, Navy, I.S.C., Ames, G. A. Kaltenbach, B.A. '23, Chaplain, Army. I owa. 324th Station Hosp., Camp MacKall, N. C. J ames L udtke, '42-'43, Navy, Northwest S.T.C., James R . Karnmeier, B.A. '41, Army, MeG . Maryville, Mo. Dept. M erritt Ludwig, '42-'43, Army Spec. Tr. U nit. All en E. Kane, B.A. '39, Lieut., Army, 184th U ni v. of S.D., Vermill ion, S.D. Gen. Hosp., Ft. Devens, Mass. J ames Luke1-, B.A. '32, Maj., Army Air Corps. Patrick Dale K elly, '40-'42, Navy. Anton Lund, B.A. '40, Pfc., Army, 306 A.A.F. Leo Kenneally, '42-'43, Navy, Northwest S.T.C., Band, Spence F ield , Moultrie, Ga. Maryville, Mo. James L und, '40-'43 , Marines, Western Mich. Charles E. Kercheval, B.A. '40, Ens., N.A.N.S., Coll. of Ed., Ka lamazoo, Mich. Hollywood, Fla. Carlton W. Lytle, B.A. '34, Lieut. (jg), Navy, Fred K ercheval, '39-'42, Pvt., Army, APO 402, U.S.N.A.S., Atlanta, Ga. % Postmaster, Nashville, Tenn. Herbert E. Kilgore, '42-'43, Army. Mc Kenneth E. Kimberlin, B.S. '35 , Lieut. (jg), Ben McCabe, '37-'41, Lieut., Staff & Faculty U.S.N.R ., Chapel Hill, N. C. S-1 , Engrs. Sch., F t. Belvoir, Va. R. W. Kimm, '35-'40, Lieut., N avy. Robert J . McCabe, B.A. '40, T / 5, 37112335, ·willi am L. Kirstein, '38-'40, Army Air Corps, APO 948, % Postmaster, Seattle, Wash. 39284413. William H. McCabe, '42-'43, Army. Bernie S. Knudsen, B.A. '26, Army, Hosp., Harry McFarland, '40-'43, Army. Vancouver, Wash. Wayne J . Mcllrath, B.A. '43, Pvt., A.S.N., O rl ando S. Knudsen, B.A. '31, Lieut. (jg), 17111634, Pin. 1, Co. B., 33d Med. Tr. En., Navy, % Fleet Postoffice, San Francisco. Camp Grant, Ill.

~ <'',- 1943- row A STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Fifteen Baird Mcllroy, '32-'38, Ens., Navy, % F leet Roy B. Minnis, B.A. '38, Ens., Navy, U niv. of Postoffice, San Francisco. Ariz., Tucson, A riz. Howard W. McKnight, B.S. '34, Pvt., Hq. & Hubert L. Missildine, B. S. '39, Lieut., 1972 Hq. Co., 2nd R.T.C. Reg ., Camp Sibert, Ala. S.C.U., Letterman Gen. Hosp., San Francisco. Malcolm J . McLelland, B.S. '37, Lieut., A.A.B .. Cla rk H. Mitze, B.A. '39, F lyin g Instr., A.A.F. Ft. Dix, N.J. Pilot Sch., Dodge City, Kan. W illiam K. McNabb, B.A. '36, Ens. , Navy, Milton L. Moon, B.A. '43, Navy. H ollywood, Fla. John K. Moore, ' 40-'43, Marines, Western Mich. R upert (Pat) McNall y, B.A. ' 38, Ens., B.O.Q., Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Floyd Bennett Field, Brooklyn, N. Y. Donald J. Moothart, '42-'43, Army. Robert G. Moss, '40-'41, Lieut., Army, Ft. Ben­ M ning, Ga. Frederick E . Mueller, B.A. '28, Lieut., Navy, Lloyd Magee, '41-'43, Army. Trinity Coll., Hartford, Conn. Harry Malmgren, '43, Army. Delbert Mullenberg, '40-'43, A.S.T.P. Unit, Basil E. Manl ey, '42-'43, Army Air Corps. Bartlett Dorm., Alfred U niv., Alfred, N. Y. Curtis W. Mahaffey, B.A. '41, Ens., Navy. John Marinos, '40-'43, Navy, Northwest S.T.C., N Maryville, Mo. Edwin A. Nash, B.A. '38, Army Air Corps. Harold V. Marshall, Cons. '32, Army Air Corps. Kent U niv., Kent, Ohio. Ted Martens, B.S. '29, avy. Davis W . Natvig, B.A. '38, Army Air Corps, Dale Martin, '42,'43, Armed Forces. Miami, Fla. L eon E. Martin, B.A. '43, Ens., Navy. Wayne Nebben, '42-'43, air corps reserve. Lawrence T. Martin, '30-'32, Marines. Dick Nehlsen, '41-43, Pvt., 57th A.A. Trng. Bn., Boyd Mast, '42-'43, Army A i1· Corps, meteor­ Btry. Co., Camp Callan, Cali f. ology, U ni v. of Wis., Madison, Wis. Edwin J . Neumann, '42, Army, Ft. Knox, K y. Sam New Bil l Mather, '40-'43, Marines, W estern Mich. berg, '38-'41, E ns., Tavy Air Corps. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Alex J. ielsen, '41-'43, Marines, Western Mich. Tilford H. Mathre, B.S. '41 , Army. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. I van W. Maurer, B.A. '41, Navy. Karl B. Nielsen, '41-'43, T / 5, 37043871, APO William Mealy, '39-'43, Army. 726, Seattle, Wash. J ohn Mecklenburg, B.S. '38, Lieut., A rmy, Phys Russell A. Nielsen, '41-'43, Navy, Farragut, Idah Trng. Officer, Hq. Sqdn., 4th A.F., San Fran­ o. cisco. Oliver Nordly, faculty,, Lieut. (jg), Navy Pre­ Richard Mershon, '38-'41, Army Air Corps. fli g ht Sch., Iowa City, Iowa. Shepard F ield, Tex. Donald R . Norland, '41-'43, Navy, Northwest S.T.C., Robert D. Mershon, '39-'42, Lieut., Army, Camµ Maryville, Mo. Sibert, Ala. James W. North, B.A. '39, Lieut., 23rd Officers J ohn Messerli, ' 42-'43, air corps reserve. Defense Course, Art. Bn., Camp LeJ eune. New Milton K. Metfessel, B.A. '21, Maj., A.A.F. River, N. C. Hdqs., Santa Ana, Calif. Percy Nymann, '42, Army, Camp Polk, La. F. Earl Mill er, B .A. '39, Lieut. (jg), Navy, 0 New Orleans, La. Kirkwood S. Oleson, '42, N.A.T.S., Corpus Galer J . Mill er, B.A. '40, Tech. 4, 37037802, Med. Christi , Tex. Det. Sta. Hosp., APO 826, % Postmaster, Garnet Dale Olive, '41-'43, Army. New Orleans, La. Harry Olson, ' 40-'43, Army. Paul L. Mill er, '40-'43, Marines. Western Mich. Bernard O'Rourke, '35-'36, Ens., Navy. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Dale H. Ott, '42, Armed Forces. Ralph L. Mill er, B.A. '37, Lieut., Army, Camp p Hulen, Tex. Ray A. Papke, B.A. '34, Cadet, A.S.N., 36626577 . Vernell e C. Mill er, B.A. '40, Cpl. , 37047374, 11th Sec. 4, 155st Serv. Unit, Bloomington, Ind. Air-borne D iv., Art. Band, Camp MacKall, Aldrich Paul, '41-'43, A rmy. N.C. James W. Paustian, B.S. '32, N.C.O., Phys. Tr., 'Wilson F. Miller, B.A. '38, S.C. 1/ c, U.S.C.G., Miami Beach, Fla. Barge 16, Foot of Market St., St. Louis, Mo. L. Everett Payne, B.A. '31, Lieut. (jg), Navy, Delb ert Mills, '40-'43, Marines, Western Mich. % Fleet Postoffice, San Francisco, Cali f. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Clifford Peck, '34-'35, Army.

Page Sixteen THE ALUMNUS October Marion Beebe, '40-'42, WAC. Sylvia M. Boltz, B.A. ' 42, A/ S, WAVES, • • N .R.M.S. Northampton, Mass. Naomi R uth Boslough, B.A. ' 38, Sp. 2/ c, Instr., U.S.N .T .S., Cedar Fall s. Teachers College alumnae ore doing Helen L. Church, B.A. '40, Lieut., WAC, Instr., their bit for Uncle Som too. Additions Ft. Des Moines. and correct ions for this directory will be Ethel G. Cocking, Pri. '26, Av. M. M., WAVES. welcomed by the Bureau of Alumni Ser­ Helen A. Colby, B.A. '28, A/ S, WAVES, v ice from whose f iles it was compiled. N .R.M.S., Northampton, Mass. CIVILIAN WAR WORKERS Viva Erickson, B.S. '40, Lieut., Army N urse Corps, M-778, 300th Gen. Hosp., Camp For­ Frances A. Bartlett, El. '36, B.Mu. '40, Service est, Tenn. Club 3, recreation hostess, Camp Crowder, Mary Lou Feldman, '37-'38, Army N urse Corps, Mo. Desert T rng. Cntr., Sapdra, Calif. Julia C. Frey, EI. '30, government worker, Biggs Field, Tex. Rosemary Fleming, B.A. '42, WAVES, A-S, V-9, Lois V. Hamer, B.A. '37, U.O.D., Bks. 322-C, U.S.N.R., N.R.M.S., South Hadley, Hermiston, Ore. Mass. Ruth 1.f. Hamer, Pri. '37, Rock Island Arsenal, Geneva H. Fober, B.A. '24, Lieut., WAC, 6 Reg. Rock I sland, Ill.; 625 E . Lombard, Daven­ Hdqs., Cantonment Area, Daytona Beach, port, Iowa. F la. Marlys Hartg rave, El. '41 , clerk-typist, Camp Madelyn Gallagher, Pri. '39, WAVES. Adair, Ore. J eannette D. Halverson, EI. '40, A/ S, WAVES, Mrs. Theresa Rohwer Ho1·deman, Pri. '18, Asst. South Hadley, Mass. Field D irector, Red Cross, Sta. Hosp ., Camp Carol H erfurth, '41-'43, WAVES. Phillips, Salina, Kan. Mary Katharine H ubbard, Maxine Hunter, B.A. '38, American Red Cross, Pri. ' 39, \VA VES. hospital recreational worker, Cairo, Egypt, Beulah M. Johnson, C ons. '34, Sgt. WAC, K at'!. Hdqs., R.C. Ft. O glethorpe, Ga. Dorothy Milversted, B.A. '43, S.P .T.A., Physi­ Erna Larsen, '36-'38, Ens., I avy Nurse Corps. cal Therapy Dept., O 'Reilly Gen. Hosp., Eleanor B. Olson, EI. '36, S. 2/c, WAVES, Springfield, Mo. Sp. (T ), Synthetic Trng., N.A.T .C., Corpus Mrs. F. A. Martin (Lucile Dennis), B.A. '33, Christi, Tex. g uard and advise r, Boeing Airplane Co., Helen Peter sen, El. '38, Chef, WAC, 71 Post W' ichita, Kan. Hdqs. Co., HRPE, Newport News, Va. Mary Jo Reed, B.A. '31 , office of strategic Lois Pettis, El. '38, services, \Vashington, D.C. Aerographer's Mate 3/ c. WAVES. Mrs. Phyll is C. Saltz ( Phyllis Crawford), E l. '40, A.A.F. Instr., Boeing P lant o. 2, Seattle, Elva Shillington, Pri. '13, A/ S, WAVES, Bldg. Wash.; 4049 Latona, Seattle 38. G-41 37, Apt. 2A, Bronx, N.Y. J eanne Van Deest, B.A. '40, staff recreational Dora M. Smith, '32, E ns., Navy N urse Corps. worker, Red Cross. Naval Hosp., Long Beach, C alif. \Vin son Wallace, B.A. '40, Red Cross, Army DeMaris M. Sohner, B.A. '34, Ens., Navy recreational work, overseas. Nurse Corps, Naval H osp. , Oakland, Cali f. Annabell e Woodward, Pri. '35, radio in structor. Edith M. Stansberry, Pri. '19, WAC, 777 WAC A.A.F. T ech. Sch., Sioux Fall s, S.D. Hdq. Co., D.A.A.F., Deming, N . Mex. Rheon G. Zack, B.A. '38, Recommendations Virginia Streeter, B.S. '35, Women's Dept., P sychological Unit, Santa Ana A.A.B., Aux. F e1Tying Sqdn. Santa Ana, Calif. , Avenger F ield, Sweetwater, T ex. WOMEN IN UNIFORM Mabel R. Thurber, E l. '30, Aux., WAC, Co. 15, Reg. 3, Army Post Bra nc Barbara Abels, Pri. '41, Marines, Hunter Col­ h, Ft. Des Moines. lege, New York City. Christie M. Toll efson, B.A. '27, Sec. Off., WAC, Army Comm. and Gen Miriam B. Baker, H.Ec. '30, 2nd Lieut., Army . Staff Sch., Ft. Lea ve nworth, Kan Nurse Corps, 13th Gen. Hosp., APO 460, . % Postmaster, Los Angeles, Calif. Ma1·jorie L. Wamsley, E I. '36, WAVES.

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Seventeen Raymond H. Pedersen, 2 nd Lieut., Army, Camp Donald Scovel, '40-'43, Cpl., Army, Hdqs. Div., McQuade, Cali f. D rew F ield, F la. Evald L. Peterson, B.A. '27, 2nd Lieut., Army H ug h F . Seabury, B.A. '28, 2nd Lieut., Army Air Corps, Miami Beach, F la. Air Corps, Aircraft D iv., Group N, Wing I I. Gerald E. Pieres, B.S. '39, L ieut., A rmy, U n­ S.A.A.C.C., San Antonio, Tex. assig ned APO 76 1, % Postmaster, N. Y. F ranklin Searcy, '41-'43, Navy, Northwest Ald o C. Podesta, B.A. '40, Sp. Serv. Rep!. Pool, S.T.C., Maryvill e, Mo. Lexington, Va. Clay W. Seaton, B.A. '33, A rmy A ir Corps, Eugene P ri ce, '39-'42, Shepard F ield, Tex. A.C.R.T.C .. Miami, F la. LuVerne Priebe, '40-'41 , Army. Richard Seidler, '40-'43, Army Air Corps, Edwin A. P uck, B.A. '40, E ns., U.S.N.R., 210-S W.S.T.C. , M il waukee, Wis. Baker E ., N.T.S., Cornell U niv., Ithaca, N.Y. Phili p R. Seltenrich, '40-'42, Army Air Corps, 301-St., A.A.F. Band, Gree1ivill e, Mi ss. R Edwi n E . Shank, B.A. '40, Armed Forces. Howard \V. Rabey, B.A. '40, Lieut., Btry., D., Royal P. Sheffield, B.A. '33, Ens., U.S.N.R., 33rd Bn., 86th Reg. F .A., F t. S ill , O kl a. N .T.S., 7th Batt.. No. 41-42, U niv. of Ariz., Charles F. Rahn, B.A. '41 , A rmy. T ucson, Ariz. Clarence M. Ransom, B.A. '26, L ieu t., U.S.N.R., Bert L. Shepa rd, B.A. '40, 2nd Lieut., Army Air Tulane Naval U nit, New Orleans, La.; 7338 Corps. H u1· st St. , New O rleans. Raymond R. Shepard, B.S. '39, Armed F orces, Nathaniel R. Rathbone, B.A. '40, Ens., U .S.N.R. Box 11 59, Kansas City, Mo. \Alay ne Rathbun, '37-'39, Capt. , Army Air Corps. LeVan Shugart, B.A. '39, E ns., Navy, T.O.Q .. Claude J . Rayburn, B.A. '41, 37048433, APO N.O.B., Norfolk, Va. 961, % Postmaster, San F rancisco. Lloyd W. Sides, '42-'43, Navy. Donald A. R eeve, '42-'43, Navy, N.T.S., Farra• Charl es Silvy, '42-'43, Navy, Northwest S.T.C., gut, Idaho. Maryvill e, Mo. H. \Villard Reninger, faculty, L ieut., N avy. Robert C. Skar, '39-'42, Lieut., Army, Signal Park Coll. , Parksville, Mo. Corps, Blue F ield, F la. Paul A. R ietz, '40-'41 , L ieut., Army Air Corps, Paul J . Skarda, B.S. '38, Lieut. , Box 169, Kelly Box 397, R .A.A.F., Roswell, N. M ex. F ield, San Antonio, Tex. Frederick H . Ritze, B.A. '42, Lieut., U.S.1'1.C.R. Lee E . Slaughter. '38-'39, Army. 2d Base Depot, Dept. of Pacific, San F ran­ Raymond H . Small ing, B.S. '3 5, Ens., U.S.N.R .. cisco. 1045 P rince Ave., Athens, Ga. Walter A. Rodby, B.A. '40, Lieut., Army, 264th Glenn D. Smith, B.S. '37, S/ Sgt., Army, Co. C, Inf., Camp Blanding, F la. 86th Mtn. Inf., Camp Hale, Colo. Howard Rogers, '40-'43, Marines, Western Richard Smith, '40-'41, Cpl. , C hanute Field, Mich. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. Rantoul, Ill. Rutherford D. Rogers, B.A. '36, Army Air Richard Snyder, '42-'43, Navy, Williams Coll., Corps. vVilliamstown, Mass. J erome H. Rothstein , B.S. '38, C. Sp., I avy. ~Jaurice Springer, '40-'41 , A rmy Air Corps, U.S.N. Hosp. , Memphi s, Tenn. Bonha m Aviation Sch., Bonham, Tex. Leo F. Solt, B.A. '43, Navy. s Donald Southall , ' 40-'43, Navy, Northwest Kenneth A. Safely, B.A. '32, L ieut. ( jg), Navy, S.T.C., Maryville, Mo. Harvard U ni v., Cambridge, Mass. John \V. Stahly, '39-'41, Lieut., Army, Ft. Dix, Leonard R. St. C lair, B.S. '38, Ens., U.S.N. R. , N. J. San Franci sco. F. E ugene Steinkamp, '39-'43, Marines, ~ Testern Lyndon H . Schaffer, '38-'41, Sgt. , Army, Der. Mich. Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. 15, 909th Q .M.Co., Y.A.A.F., Yuma, Ariz. Edward E. Stewart, B.S. '38, Capt. , Army, 365 Earl Schramm, '42-'43, Marines, Western Mich. F.A. Bn., B try. C, APO 445 , Camp Swift, Coll. of Ed., Kalamazoo, Mich. T ex. Edwin M . Schreib er, B.S. '38, S/ Sgt., Army, Robert L. Stewart, '40-'41 , Army. 1183 Trng. Gr., B.T.C. 10, Greensboro, N.C. Robert H . Stewart, ' 42-'43, Army Air Corps, Paul H. Schuldt, B.A. '42, Lieut., Marines, Bos­ Santa A na, Calif. ton, Mass. Bernard Schuller, '41-'43, air corps. James H . Steiner, B.S. '36, Armed Forces. Gene Schultz, '37-'39, Ens., Navy, San Fran­ Alvin C. Stieger, B.S. '33, Lieut., Army, I 13th cisco. C.A. Gr. (A.A.), Canap Haan, Calif.

Page Eighteen THE ALUMNUS Octobe1 Dr. Fossum Replaces Henrikson .. THE CAM PUS TODAY ANOTHER NEWCOMER TO THE CAMPUS this (Continued from page nine ) fall is Dr. Ernest Fossum, who replaces Dr. E. H. Henrikson, now teaching in Colorado, as director of speech correction . Dr. Fossum received his B.A. degree from Augustana College in Sioux Falls, South Dako­ ta and his M.A. from the State University of Miss Iowa . . . He has served as professor of speech Anne at Kansas City Junior College, Kansas City, Stuart Missouri. Duncan * Opening Convocation Held A FORMAL MATRICULATION CONVOCATION to inaugurate the new school year was held in the auditorium Friday, September 7, the first day fall term classes started, to give the faculty and Miss Marybelle McClelland, formerly refer-• students an opportunity to come together more ence librarian who has been on the staff since of ten as an integrated body and to develop a 1929, has succeeded Miss Duncan. spirit of unity . . . · A fter receiving the B.A. degree from the President Malcolm Price presided at th,: University of Michigan, Miss Duncan attended convocation, and Dr. Gerald L. Knoff, director the university of Chicago where she completed of religious activity at Teachers College, de­ work for her library certificate ... Miss Mc­ livered the address ... Clelland received the B.A. degree from Pom­ ona College and the B.S. and M.S. degrees As Mr. George Samson, instructor in music, from Columbia University. played the organ, the faculty in full academic regalia, marched to seats on the platform. Stu­ dents of each class were seated in special section, * reserved for that group .. . New Instructor in Education The convocation is the first of a series of Miss ESTHER HULT, graduate of the Univer­ assemblies planned by a committee appointed by sity of Wisconsin with the M.A. degree is a Dr. Price. It consists of Professor Leland W . new instructor in elementary education on the Sage, Frank W. Hill, Dr. Gerald E. Knoff, TEACHERS COLLEGE faculty this fall .. . and Miss Marybelle McClelland. Student members are Bette Gibson, Basil Gray, Miss Hult comes from Richland County Elberta Lutz, and Bernadette Lyon. Normal School in Richland, Wisconson, where she has taught for the past four years . . . While there she was instructor in social science, music and education . . . The new instructor * will also assist with the advising of students Mrs. Latham Visits Campus taking the two-year elementary course . .. She Mrs. 0. R. Latham of Boston, Mass., widow has taught in rural and small town schools and of the former president of TEACHERS COLLEGE, at one time served as dean of girls at Milltown, and her daughter, Shirley, were visitors on Wisconsin ... She has had experience in dra­ the campus in August. Miss Latham has ac­ matic work, music, and as director of girls' cepted a position as secretary to the principal clubs. of Dana Hall School, Wellesley, Mass.

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Nineteen Donald J. Stout, B.A. '41, Ens., Coast Guard, 848 Euclid Ave., Miami Beach 39, Fla. ROLL OF HONOR Donald W. Stout, B.A. '37, Capt., Army Air Corps, Q.M.C., A.A.B., Salt Lake City 1, NEIL W . JOHNSON Utah. Captain Neil W. Johnson, '31-'33, died while Carl B. Strand, B.A. '33, Army. Albert L. Strong, B.A. '37, Ens., Coast Guard, of the Japanese in the Philippines a prisoner % Dist. Coast Guard Officer, Ketchikan, on June 11. A former resident of Cedar Falls, Alaska. Captain Johnson was active in debate and Harold E. Sturm, '41-'43, Cp l. , Army, Co. H, public speaking while on the campus. 15th Sig. Reg., Ft. Monmouth, N.J. Edgar 0 . Suiter, '39-'40, Army. Edgar P. Swanson, B.S. '36, C.P.O., Navy, DWIGHT G. BACON instr., electrical school, I.S.C., Ames, Iowa. " Duane Swindle, '33-'34, 2nd Lieut., Army E ngr. Lieut. Dwight G. Bacon, '36-'37, was killed Corps, Ft. Lewis, Wash. in a plane crash in California on June 22. He T was a member of Phi Sigma Epsilon fraternity Jerome Taylor, '40-'43, Navy, Northwest S.T.C., while attending TEACHERS COLLEGE. Maryvill e, Mo. Ozzo B. Taylor, B.A. '39, Pfc., Army, APO 261, % Postmaster, Shreveport, La. ROY" OLSEN Herman S. T harp, B.A. '41 , A .C., Army A ir Captain Roy Olsen, B.A. '39, was killed in Corps, Sq. S, Div. 38, Yale Univ., New Haven, Conn. action in the South Pacific on June 23. While Donald M. T hompson, '40-'41 , Army, Uni v. of on the campus, Captain Olsen served as presi­ W. Va., Morgantown, W. Va. dent of Men's Union, was a member of Alpha Howard Thompson, '39, Ens. , U.S.N.R. Chi Epsilon, business manager of the OLD Kenneth Thompson, '40-'42, Navy V-1 2, Berea GOLD, and a member of Blue Key, the Press Coll., Berea, Ky. Carl Thomsen, '41-'43, E ngrs. Rep. Cr., Ft. Club, and the Commercial Club. Belvoir, Va. Captain Olsen has posthumously been award­ Warren J. Thomsen, B.A. '42, Army Air Corps. ed the Purple Heart and the Silver Star, ac­ Lawrence A. Thurston, B.A. '37, Y. 1/c, Navy, cording to word received by his father in Cedar Camp Dodge, Iowa. Falls. Harland E. Troy, B.A. '41, Lieut., U.S.M.C. Paratroops, Camp Pendleton, Calif. Charles L. Tubbs, B.A. '41, E ns., U.S.N.R., ROBERT McCOWEN Naval Sta., Holl ywood, Fla. · Listed as missing in action over Paris since Bruce T ucker, '41-'43, Army, Coast Art., San Diego, Cali f. B.A. '41. July 10 is Lieut. Robert McCowen, Kenn eth A. T uinstra, '39-'41, Pvt. , Marines, Pn. Lieutenant McCowen taught vocal music in 459, R.D.M.C.B., San Diego, Calif. the West Waterloo High School prior to his James G. T urnbull, B.A. '42, Cp l. , A rmy, APO entrance in the Army Air Corps. He was a 525, % Postmaster, N. Y. member of the student council, Phi Mu Alpha u Sinfonia, Alpha Delta Alpha, the band, and John P . U ll rich, B.A. '41, Pvt., Army, Co. B, orchestra while attending TEACHERS COLLEGE. 410th Inf., Camp Claiborne, La. V ~ Ovey Vaala, B.S. '37, Armed Forces. H. ALLEN OEHLERT Joe Valenta, '40-'43, Army. Donald A. Van Deest, '42-'43, Army, Bks. 310, Lieut. H. Allen Oehlert, '37-'41, a member 30 1 Trng. Gr., Shepard Field, Tex. of the Navy Air Corps, has been listed as miss­ Wayne Van Deest, B.S. '37, S/ Sgt., Army, ing in action in the Solomon Island area. His 37262691, APO 3660, % Postmaster, N. Y. home was m Woodburn, Iowa. Alvin Varner, '37-'40, Naval Air Corps, Corpus Christi, Tex. Victor F. Varvel, '41-'43, Army Air Corps.

Page Twenty THE ALUMNUS October Albert Vito, '39-'40, Ens., Navy. Koert Voorhees, '32-'34, Navy, Newberry Coll.. e~ g~ Newberry, S.C. • • .,_....,,1,:~ • • •• w William Walsh, '38-'43, Navy. They're not in uniform, but they're \Villiam D. Walton, '35-'41, Lieut., Army Ai! doing their bit for Uncle Sam Corps. just like Robert A. Warner, B.A. '33, Army. any soldier, sailor, or marine. Corrections, Robert J. W ell s, '42, Army, Flt. 469, 27th Sq., additions, and new names for this l ist will 507 Trng. Gr., Kearns, Utah. be welcomed by the Bureau of Alumni Fred C. Weltz, Jr., '39-'42, A. C., Army Air Service from whose files it was com piled. Corps, Luke F ield, Ark. Robert L. W erner, '39-'43, Navy. Maurice E. Brayton, B.A. '34, Civilian Instr., Harvey Westcott, '42, Army Air Corps. N.T.S., Cornell Coll., Mt. Vernon, Iowa. Hubert W . White, B.A. '39, Army. Everett H. Bryant, Ru. '33, Civilian Instr., air James White, '42-'43, Navy. Northwest S.T.C., service command, A.A.F. Maryvill e, Mo. Ardon L. Cole, B.S. '33, American Red Cross. Norman E . White, '42, Coast Guard. Edwin Cram, '22-'34, Red Cross. Roland W . White, B.A. '36, Ens., Navy, U.S.N. Dwain L. Daughton, B.A. '31, Red Cross O.B., Trinidad, B.W.I. Mil. Div. Robert B. Wiley, '42-'43, Army. George R. Donovan, B.A. '36, government Edward J. Wittman, B.A. '43, Armed Forces. work. Dayton H. W inter, B.S. '30, Ph. M. 3/ c, Navy. Marion T. Haahr, B.S. '33, Office Mgr., C.F. Edward Wittman, officer's training, Columbia Lytle & Gree n Cons. Co., P .O. Box 989, Fair­ U niv., N. Y. banks, Alaska. Roger A. Wood, '39-'40, Pfc., Army, G4, Sec. Dermond R. Reinmiller, B.A. '40, Civilian Hdqs. 3, Camp Sam Houston, Tex. Instr. in radio, A.A.B., Sioux Fall s, S.D. Stanl ey Wood, '27-'31, Pvt., Army, 32980054, Graham Hovey, '26-'36, war correspondent in Receivi ng Co., Bks. 1, Camp Upton, L. I. North Africa. Roy Howard, B.A. '25, C ivi lian Instr., Ft. y Knox, K y. Frank M. Jefferson, B.A. '26, Sci.-Math. Instr. Mark W. Yaggy, B.A. '41 , Army, 571 st A.A.W. \Var Trng. Serv., Des Moines. Bn., Drew Field, F la. Robert B. Kamm, B.A. '40, Instr., A.A.F., Harold R. Yeoman, B.A. '42, Ph. M. 3/ c, Navy, T.T.C., Sioux Falls, S .D. N.O.P., Room 301 , 141 W . Jackson, C hi cago. Milo Lawton, B.A. '37, senior clerk, Ordnance O rvin D. Yeoman, ' 40-'41, Ph. M. 1/ c, U.S.N. Depot, Camp Adair, ( civil service). Hosp., Dorm. 8, HCQ, Navy 10, % F leet John H. Lounsberry, B.A. ' 40, Civilian Instr. Postoffice, San Francisco, Calif. of air cadets in the dept. of maintenance engr. at Yale U niv., New Haven, Richard Yousling, '40-'42, Navy. Conn. Floyd L. Moeller, B.A. '34, Ass't. Dept. Cen­ sor in War Dept., Miami, Fla. Charles W. North, B.A. '31, Civilian Instr., in radio, Army S ignal Corps, Ill. Sch. of Tech., In the Army Now ... Chicago. John E. Partington, B.A. '13, office Frank W. Hill and M. J. Nelson are in the of cus­ todian of alien property, Washington, D.C. Army now! No, they are not the Mr. Hill, M. Leigh Strohbehn, B.A. '37, Civilian Instr. violin instructor, or Dean of Faculty Nelson, in sheet metal at Chanute Field, Ill. although both are one the campus. Elmer Taber, B.A. '28, Civilian Instr. in radio, A.A.F. This Mr. Hill and Mr. Nelson are part of Tech. Sch., A.A.B., Sioux Fall s, S.D. Flight 19 of the 80th College Training Detach­ Arthur Vinall, '37-'38, civilian attached to the ment stationed on the Teachers College cam­ air transport command, APO 648, % Post­ pus. Private Frank W. Hill's home is in master, N . Y. Chicago, and Private Nelson hails from Denver, Chauncey M. Welch, B.A. '28, Al Johnson Colorado. Construction Co. of N. Y. in Canada.

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Twenty-one Delinda Roggensack, P.S.M. '21, has been elected second vice-presid ent of the North Cen­ tral Music Educators' Conference. T he office is • • for two years. M iss Roggensack, who teaches in Newton, Iowa, ,vas the fir st president of the Iowa Music Educators' Association. 1 8 8 9 - 1 9 2 3 G. A. Kaltenbach, B.A. '23, is a chaplain at the 324th Station H ospital, Ca mp MacKall , N .C. Peter G. Fullerton, B.S. '89, has served as Before bein g commissioned, he was pastor of U.S. commissioner f or the western district of the F irst Presbyterian Church, Ironwood, Mich., Oklahoma since 1939 w ith power to try federal where his fami ly is staying this year. petty off enses committed on the Ft. Sill Re­ Mrs. H. L. Leech (Berniece Grover), Com'!. servation a nd the Vvi chita Forest Reserve. H e '23, is now employed by the Iowa Department has two sons in the Navy. of Social W elfare. H er address : 726 Sixth Ave., A. Ballard (Adah Snedicon ), Mrs. Francis Apt. 21 , Des Moines 9, Iowa. B.Di. '97, is now li vin g at 1623 N. Mariposa Seabury, J.C. '23, is an in structor a t Ave., I-Ioll ywood 27, Cali f. Lorna the University of M innesota. H er address: 809 . Andrew N . Wray are farming Mr. and Mrs S.E. Sixth St. She receive d the B.A. and M.A. Paynesvill e, Minn. Mr. Wray, B.D i. ' 00, near degrees from the U ni versity of vV isconsin. receive d the B. A. de 0 Tee from the U ni versity of Mrs. Ramon Sonosto (Jessie Hall), P ri . '23, Minnesota in 1924. now lives at 5602 S. Van Ness Ave., Los Teackle, M.Di. '04, is teaching history Thomas Angeles 37, Calif. She teaches fir st grade in in Spokane, Wash. His adress: Lewis and Los A ngeles, and her husband is a doctor of High School, Spokane 9, Wash. Clark musical science and teaches deaf nn:'.es through Tura A. Hawk, B.Di. 'OS , is teacher of bio­ the medium of their teeth by musica l sounds. logica l science in the Technical High School, Oakla rid , Cali f. Her address: 11 06 Glendora 1924-1928 Ave., Oakland 2. . Alvin W. Schindler (Doris Mrs. Ted Muller (Margaret Schoeneman), El. Mr. and Mrs '24), are livin g at 7304 H opkin s '10, is the new elementary supervisor in the Hood, P.S.M. College Park, M d. M i-. Schindler, B.A. DeWitt, Ark., public schools. Her address is Ave., accepted a position as professor JS Oak Ave., D eW itt. '27, recently of education w ith the U niversity of Maryland. Hazel MacDonald, J .C. ' 12, is in structor in Mrs. Marie J. Stearns (:Ma ry J. H orak), J. C. music at the State Teachers Coll ege, Towson, '24, is living at 15 6 E. Bonita Ave., Baldwin Md. She received the B.S. and M.A. degrees Park, Calif. H er sister, Bessie Horak, Pri. '26. from Colu mbia U ni versity. now Mrs. F. L. Bures, resid es at R oute 2, Cedar Mary Eide, J .C. ' 14, is now living in T ule Rapids. Lake PrOf~c t, Newell , Calif. . , ~ ~r ,- . H. R. Cummins, B.A. '25, has recently been Mrs. N. A. Gangsei (Thelma Carlson), H .Ec. appoin ted a ssistant manager of the vV esting­ '17, is making her home at 910 Forest Ave., house Appliance Engin eerin g Dept. in East Northfield, Minn. She has four children. P ittsburgh, Pa. H e received the M.A. deg ree from the U niversity of Iowa in 1927. Mr. and Mrs. Edward W . Clinton (Edna E . Alda Martin), J.C. '25 , Gunderson, Ru. '18) , Ji ve at 4917 Grand Ave., Mrs. A. W . Price (C. s with her husband w ho is s tationed with the Omaha, Te b. They have a daug hter, Patricia, i st, N. J. H er address twelve. signal corps in All enhur is 222 Cedar Avenue. Mrs. George L. Lakin (Ice! Snider), Ru. '18; Rev. and Mrs. F. M. Smith (Altha C. Curtis, is living at 412 23 rd St., Sacramento 16, Calif. B.A. '25) live in Min eral Point, Wis., w ith their Mrs. Mattie Tannatt (Mattie Woodruff), J.C. three children. Rev. Smith · is pastor of the '18, is a worker at the Des Moines Ordnance F irst Methodist Church there. It -is the first P la nt, a nd is li ving at 325 Greely, Des Moines. Protestant church in Wisconsin and dates back Bess Howell, B.A. ' 19, . is taking flight train­ to 1828. ing · at Sweetwater, Tex., leading to an assign­ Comm. and Mrs. J. J. Potter (Iris E . Mat­ ment in the ferry command. She has taught in theis, Pri. '26) are living at Quarters 0, Naval LaPorte City and Gladbrook, Iowa, a nd.. Poplar Hospital, Great Lakes, Ill. Mr. Potter, '17-'20, Grove, Ill. 1 , " is a lieutena nt comma nder in the Navy.

Ra-ge T wen ty~Hii-o ~-- ,•-_ TBE ALUMNUS October Mr. and Mrs. Alden W. Ba'uder ( Bertha ~fay Tracy, P ri. "27) are living · at the Mt. Vernon Country Club, Golden, Colo, , with their three Alumnae Are Authors . . . daug hters. Mr. Bauder is an engineer at the Two TEACHERS CoLLEGE ALUMNAE, Delia R emington O rdnance Plant in Denver. Goetz, B.A. '32, and Betty Clock Peckham, Mrs. Carl Meehan (Avi s Newbury), B.A. '27, J.C. '24, are making their contributions to cur­ is li ving at 214 East 19th St., Dartmouth Apart­ rent American ment 107, Minneapoli s, Minn. literature for young people_ Mrs. Marguerite Chester, B.A. '28, is now Both have had not just one book published, living at 406 W. Fifth Ave., Roselle, N. J. but Miss Goetz has been the author of three Mr. and Mrs. Theodore F. Paige (Helen I. bo:,ks describing Latin American countries, and Tisdale, Ru. '28) are now livin g in Athens, Ohio. Mrs_ Peckham has written two books of inter­ Mr. Paige, B.S. '30, is c hairman of the indus­ est to teen-agers. trial a rts department at Ohio University. He receiv ed hi s M.A. degree in 1933 from the Uni­ Miss Goetz, who taught for two years after versity of Iowa. her graduation from TEACHERS COLLEGE at the State Normal School, Albion, Ohio, has also 1929-1931 been a teacher in the Panama Canal Zone, North Dakota, Cuba Mary E . Butler, B.S. '29, who teaches com­ , and Guatemala City. merce in the high school in Balboa, Cana l Zone. She is now on the staff of the Washington spent the past summer at the home of her Bureau of the Foreign Policy Association_ parents in Cedar Fall s. Out of her experiences in teaching and in Lillian Paula Dresser, B.A. '29, is assistant traveling through all of the Central American principal at St. Anne's School in Charlottes­ countries, has grown her list of books for vi ll e, Va. She received her M.A. degree from young the U ni versity of Cin cinnati in 1938. people. These include "Neighbors to the Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Hawks (Alice Boers, South," a geographical-cultural survey of twelve El. '29) have moved to 451 Frank St., Council Latin-American countries; "Panchita," the story Bluffs, Iowa, w here Mr. Hawks is s ports editor of a little Guatemalan Indian girl, and her of the Council Bluffs Nonpareil. They have latest, "Half a Hemisphere," is a history of two c hildr en. Latin America. Nina Rietz Heathershaw, Ru. '29, is teaching­ Mrs_ Peckham, who is school librarian seventh and eighth grades and grade school at music in the Rowan, Iowa, Consolidated School. Bloomfield Junior High School in Newark, Rev. Philip L. Shutt, B.A. '29, is pastor of N_ J-, has written "Sky Hostess," which has the Calvary Episcopal Church in Lombard, Ill. been put into Braille, reprinted in a school His address is 105 West Maple St. anthology, and listed on outlines for the school Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Berry (Frances Van aviation program. Her second book, "Other Dyke, B.A. '30) have moved to Clarion, Iowa, People's Children," is a vocational study of where Mr. Berry, B.A. '32, will teach instru­ teen-age children, designed mental music and direct the municipal band. to tie in with child care and the high school Mr. and Mrs. Fred Caudle (Mildred Pete_rson. Victory Corps pro­ K g. '30) live on a farm near Ellsworth, Iowil. grams_ It is based on her own and her sister's They have two children. experiences_ Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Colburn (Marjorie Mrs_ Peckham's hobby is art, and she is also McKibben, El. '30) have c hanged their address the author of an article on the WAACs which to Box 211 , % Shell Chemical Co., Torrance, was published in the April, 1943, issue of "The Cali f. American Girl." Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Heath (Katherine Rose, B.A. '30) are li vi ng at 17113 Ventura Blvd., Encino, Cali f. Mr. H eath is an artist at Lock­ M.S. degree in 1932, from Iowa State College, heed. Ames. Mrs. Marvin H. Tow, B.S. '30, is living at 240 Lois E_ Anderson, El. '31, is public health West 29th St., Norfolk, Va., where her hus­ nurse with the city-county health unit in Colo­ band is stationed with the engineer corps. Mrs. rado Springs, Colo. Her address is 28 E. Tow, formerly Lillian R. Thein, received the Boulder St.

1943 IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Twenty-three Mary Jo Read, B.A. '31, has been granted a cepted a position as teaclier in the intermediat1: leave of absence from Milwaukee State Teach­ schools in Van Port City, Ore. She will be ers Coll ege to take a research position with the accompanied there by her daug hter, Rex, who Office of Strategic Services in \/Vashington, D.C. is a senior in hig h school. Mrs. Thiese re­ She receiv ed the M.S. deg ree from U niversity o'. ceived her M.A. degree from Colorado U ni ver­ Chicago and the Ph.D. degree from the Uni­ sity. versity of Wisconsin. Paul F. Hill, B.A. '34, who for the past five years has been directing Iowa's highway safe­ 1 9 3 2 ty education program, has been commissioned a li eutenant (jg) in the Navy. Bert L. Wood­ Catherine B. Ascher!, E l. '32, is now li vin g cock, B.S. '29, will serve as director of the at 1623 Grand Ave., Kalamazoo, Mich. program in hi s absence. Before being com­ Dorothy Hansell, Pri. '32, is teaching this missioned, Mr. H ill taught in Nora Springs. year in the primary g rades of the Des Moines Tipton, and Des Moines. Mrs. Hill, their school system. daug hter, Sharry, and their son, Jimmy, wil! Byrl D. Houck, B.A. '32, is director of the remain at their home at 4206 Allison Ave. , Des \,Vebster County Department of Social Welfare. Moines, for the present. His address: 1303 Sixth Ave. N., F t. Dodge, Mrs. W. B. Morganson (Beatrice Moore). Iowa. P ri. '34, is now living at 5261 Arsenal \,Vay, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn M. Johnson (Audrey W. Park Addition, Bremerton, Wash. Hayward, B.A . '32) live at 1923 Crocker St., Mrs. Alvin S,tieger (Miriam R. Marston), Des Moin es. Mrs. Johnson was a secretary in B.A. '34, is living at 424 Sixth St., N.W .. Ft. Dodge, Iowa, before her marriage, and Mason City, Iowa, where she teaches junior M r. J ohnson is a chef a t the Club 100 in Des high school rnusic. H er husband is in the Moin es. Army anti-aircraft division. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Sherman (Helen E. Mrs. Edgar P. Swanson (Irene Warner), ·w il er, B.A. '32) and their three children have B.A. '34, is office manager at Iowa State Col­ moved from Hammond, Ind., to Colorad,) lege, Ames. Her husband, a chief petty officer, Springs, Colo. Mr. Sherman, B.A. '33, is secre­ is teaching in the electrical school fo r the Navy tary of the junio1· work at the Y.M.C.A. there. at Iowa State. Mrs. Dora D. White, Con s. '32, is teach­ in g fo~ rth and fifth grades this yea 1· in Buffalo, 1935-1939 Iowa. Last summer she enlisted in the \,VOvV's ahd did precision grinding a t the Rock I slam!, Mrs. Howard Boeke (Anna Mae Erb), Ru. Ill., A1·senal. '35, is now li vi ng in Durand, Ill., Route 1. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Horn (C. Marie Morrison. • Henry Dodson, '35-'41, is one of six IowJ Cons. '33) a1·e li vi ng at 222 West A rgonne men awarded the D istinguished F lyin g Cros, Drive, Kirkwood, Mo. Mr. Horn is employed and Air Medal fo r successful completion of 100 by the War Department in St. L oui s. They hours of operational fli g ht missions in cargo have three daughters. planes in the Aleutians. He is a captain in the Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Laube (Lavon G. Dun­ Army a ir corps. lea, B.A. '33) are associated with the China Word has been receive d at Teachers Coll ege National Aviation Corp., and are establishing of the posthumous promotion of Earl E. Snell hospitals throughout China. They formerly Jr., '35-'36, from lieutenant to captain. Captain li ved in Branford, Conn. Snell was killed September 10, 1942, in the Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Martin (Lucil e Dennis, crash of an Army bomber. B.A. '33) have recently purchased a new home Carl E. Benander, B.A. '36, was ordain ed a at 1902 E. Waterman, Wichita, Kan. Mr. Mar­ minister in the Lutheran Church on May 25, tin is a salesman for John Sexton & Co., Whole­ 1943, and is now pastor of the Lutheran Church s?Je Grocery House, Chicago. in Manson, Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Risse are now living Mr. and Mrs. Allen Struthers (Margaret Hun­ at 36 Colorado St., Arcadia, Calif. Mr. Risse, trods, El. '36) are living on a fa rm near Collins, B.S. '33, is working at Lockheed in Burbank. Iowa. They have a son, J ames Theodore, born Novem­ Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gregory (Ruth Beck­ ber 23, 1942. er, P ri. '17) with their two daughters, two and Alma Thiese, B.A. '33, who has taug ht in four years old, live at 520 Seventh St. S.E., Oelwein , Iowa, for the past 15 years, has ac- Cedar Rapids., Iowa.

Page Twenty-four THE ALUMNUS 0 1:Jober Guy Iversen, '37-'40, w ho was reported miss­ ing in action in July, 1942, after the fall of Bataan, is a p1·i soner of the Japanese 111 the Mis.s Henrietta Thornton Dies P hilippines. Miss HENRIETTA THORNTON, who served on Mrs. Robert H. Lage (Dorothy Seeman), P ri. the staff of the art department of TEACHERS '37, is with her hu sba nd, a captain in the Cc LLEGE for 37 years until her retirement in Marines, a t 957 H ighland Ave., Dunedin, F la. Before her marriage in 1942, M rs. Lage taught 1932, died August 9, 1943, in San Diego, in Bloomfi eld, T ipton, and Davenport. California. Mr. and Mrs. Rex D. Longhorn ( Laura R. Miss Thornton, who came to TEACHERS Ligget, P ri. '37) are li ving at 61 Ig lehart Ave., COLLEGE as an instructor of art in 1895, served St. Paul , M inn. Mr. Long horn is a radio tech­ as head of the department of art from 1913 nician fo r Northwest A irlines. to 1922 and as professor of art from then Mrs. Howard W . Rabey (Virginia Frank) , E l. until her retirement. '37, is teaching in Lawton, Iowa. Her husband is a lie utenant in the Army. She was a native of Ohio, and burial was m Capt. Wayne Rathbun, '37-'39, was presented Defiance, Ohio. the D isting ui shed F lying Cross and Air Medal in July, 1943, by General H. H . Arnold. Captain Rathbun has been ser vi ng in the south P acific. received hi s B.D. degree from the U niversity of Mr. and Mrs. Max W. Sampson (Mary J ane Chicago. Stewart, P ri . '37) li ve on a farm near Gray, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Hart (Muriel E. l owa. T hey have a daug hter, Aurelia Ann, borr: Warnock, E l. '39) li ve on a fa rm near Anamosa, December 8, 1942. Iowa. K. X. Utterback, B.S. '37, is teaching com­ Mrs. Lloyd C. Larson (Lola Hauser), E l. '39, mercial subjects in the Clarinda, Iowa, H ig h is employed as case worker in the home service School this year. cl erartment of the Red Cross, and her husba nd Mr. and Mrs. Dwight S. Winter are living at is an accountant in the Carnegie, Ill., Steel Corp. 1010 Ninth St. S.W., Cedar Rapids, w here Mr. T heir a cl cl1· ess is 6437 K in sbark, Chi cago, 37. \,Vinter, B.S. '37, is employed in a defense Virginia C. Loy, El. '39, is employed by the plant. Bank of America of San F rancisco, Cali f. H er Orville W . Thurston, B.S. '38, is deputy zone address is 1261 Grove St. , San Francisco 17. coll ector of internal revenue at Ames, Iowa. Mrs. Kenneth Markham (Agnes Simonson), He fo rmerly taug ht at Spencer. Mr. a nd Mrs. E I. '39, is li ving in Lyle, Minn. Thurston li ve at 51 2 Burnett Ave., Ames. Alice D. Miller, E l. '39, teaches the fo urth Leland Usher, '38, a member of the Royal grade at Anamosa, Iowa. Her address is 205 S. Canadian A ir Force w ho was reported missing Booth St., Anamosa. in action in E ng land, is now a pri soner of wa1· Dorothy May Myers, B.A. '39, is employed in Germany. H is plane was shot cl own ove:· a s city reporter and staff photographer for the F rance while returning from a rai d on Germany. Davenport Democrat. Her address is 130 E. 18th St. She taught at Ringsted, Iowa, fo r a 1 9 3 9 year and attended the U ni versity of Iowo., majori ng in journalism. Lieut. and Mrs. L. E. Carpenter (Bernacl in 1o Harold Plank, B.A. '39, now operates the H ill­ Rench), B.A. '39 and B.A. '36, respective ly, arc side Cafe on Coll ege H ill. The P lanks have one now li ving at 665 Islay St. , San L uis O bi spo, daughter, J ean Ann. Calif. Leo E. Olson, B.A. '39, is employed by the Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Christ (Mil cl 1·e cl K arr, F raser-Brace E ng ineering Co. M r. and Mrs. B.A. '39) are li vi ng in Spencer, Iowa, w here M r. O lson have a daughter, Susa n Lee, born July Christ is a n automobil e salesman. T hey have 5, 1942. Their address is 904 Maple St., John­ a son, Ronald, born Oct. 28, 1942. son City, Tenn. Dorothea Fitzgerald, B.A. '39, is now living at W. Wendell Phillips, B.A. '39, is a super­ 424 Quincy St., Rapid City, S. D. visor of production at the Glenn L. Martin o. Erwin A. Gaede, B.A. '39, is minister of the Co., in Omaha, Neb. His wife is the former First Congregata ional Church in Argo, Ill. His Ruby Willoughby, B.A. '38. T heir address is address is 71'05 West 65th P lace, Argo, Ill. He 22 1 Howard St. , O maha 5.

1943 rowA STA TE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Twenty-five -~-~------•>-,.. ______

Charlotte Curtis, one of the five girls who took the home manage­ ment house course this summer, is shown as she picks a posy for the table at Dr. Sutherland's home where the girls lived for six weeks. ( See page two. ) Charlotte re­ ceived her B.A. degree in August and is teaching home economics at the Kanawha, Iowa, High School this foll.

F . Virginia Rohde, B.A. '39, is an instructor Elizabeth Witt, B.A. '39, is working in the in­ of brass instruments and theory at Miami Uni­ spection department at the Diesel Plant at Gen­ versity, Oxford, Ohio. Last summer she was eral Motors in Detroit, Mich. She lives with instructor of mathematics for the V-12 progran,. Jean Morton, B.A. '41. Their address is 14409 Frances Sadoff, B.S. '39, is teaching commer­ Freeland. Detroit 27, Mich. cial subjects in the Ann Arbor High School. Her address is 1604 Shadford Road, Ann Arbor, 1 9 4 0 Mich. Leroy E . Bauman, B.A. '40, receind the de­ Harry A. Schley, B.S. '39, is coaching at gree of bachelor of sacred theology from the Bloomfield, Iowa, Junior College and High Boston, Mass., Univer,:ty School of Theology, School. He formerly was coach at Nashua. Hi,. May 24, 1943. He is minister of the Quarry wife is the former Frances LeValley, Pri. '38. Street Methodist Church in Fall River, Mass. The new address of Rev. and Mrs. A . J. Elenora Bohne, Kg. '40, is teaching second Starke (Isabelle Mowbray, El. '39) is 2718 grade in St. Ansgar, Iowa. Her address is 732 Rockingham Road, Davenport, Iowa. Reverend N. Second Ave., Newton, Iowa. 5 ince gradua­ Starke is pastor of Immanuel Lutheran Church tion she attended the 1942 summer session at there. They have a daughter, Elaine, two. the University of \¥isconsin. Doris DeJong, B.A. '40, is now employed a, Marcella Trottnow, B.A. '39, taught commer­ junior weather bureau observer in Kansas City, cial subjects last year at Aurelia, Iowa. Mo. Her address is 33-16 Summit Bldg. Lela Van Engen, B.A. '39, is fi ll ing a leave of Mrs. Harvey H . Denter (Ruby Belle Jen sen) absence vacancy as a fourth grade supervisor El. '40, is teaching fifth and sixth grades in at the University of Wyoming. She received Sabula, Iowa. She was married June 7, 1942. her M.A. degree in 1942 from the U niversity of Norman W . Dierks, B.A. '40, is junior high Iowa. Her address is Hoyt Hall, Laramie, Wyo. school principal and mathematics teacher in Hartley Westbrook, '39-'41, a lieutenant in the Odebolt, Iowa. He studied last summer at the Army Air Corps, is a prisoner of war in Ger­ Colorado State College of Education. He and many. his wife are the parents of a daughter born Nov. Maxine White, B.A. '39, is director of social 7, 1942. welfare of Plymouth County in Le Mars, Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Ehlers (Grace Wylie. Her address: Box 117, Le Mars. B.A. '40) are living at 206 ½ Austin Ave., Ma­ Mrs. Beryl Wyatt (Harriet Gouge), El. '39, quoketa, Iowa. They were married April 18, and son, David, are making their home w ith her 1942. Mr. Ehlers is herd superintendent of the parents in Corwith, Iowa, where Mrs. Wyatt is Rosemere Farms near :Maquoketa. teaching this year. Gertrude Dunlap, Pri. '41, i·, Mrs. Paul A. Grummer (Florence Wheeler). also teaching there. El. '40, is living at 2645 Avalon Place, Columbus,

Page T wenty-six THE ALUMNUS October Ohio. H er hu sband is a li enutenant 111 the Marion Tonsfeldt, B.A. '40, is employed in the .\rmy E ng in eer Corps. Procurement Office of the Ducommun Co. in Mrs. Don B. Hanson (Andrea Bear), El. '40, West Los Angeles. Her address: 1806 Barry is teaching in Manly, Iowa. H er husband i5 Ave. in the air corps. Muriel Tvedt, El. '40, is teaching junior high Mrs. Willard G. Hatfield (Betty Ann Hall), science in Tama, Iowa. B.A. '40, is li vi ng in Mt. P leasant, Iowa. Her Mrs. Charles Vorderberg (Florence (Arnold), husband, L ieutenant Hatfield, is a pilot in the B.A. '40, taught last year at Bridgewater, Iowa. Army Air Corps, ser vi ng somewhere in Aus­ H er husband is serving in the armed forces. trali a. Mrs. M. W. Hemphill (H elen Benzing), B.A 1 9 4 1 "4 0. is teaching in the What Cheer High School Mrs. Richard W. Abele (Jane Borchardt), Kg. Her husband is in the Army Air Corps. '41, is living at 706 East Ninth St., Atlantic, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Keigan (Nellie E . John­ Iowa. H er husband is in the Army Air Corps. ston, E l. '40) live at 636 Okmulgee, Norman, Mrs. Daniel K. Brown (Carol Jane Oster­ Okla., w here Mr. Keigan is in the Aviation holm), B.A. '41, is an accountant clerk a t the Maintenance Navy School. Mrs. Keigan doe:; Compton Junior College in Compton, Calif. H er substitute teaching in Norman. address is 1239 Dudley Ave., Compton. Her Grace J. Leask, B.S. '40, is clothing instructor husband, L ieutenant Brown, is now stationed in in Crystal Lake, Iowa. Her permanent address Africa. is R. 4, Martin Road, Waterloo. Margaret P. Cupp, B.A. '41, is a physical edu­ Mrs. Earl R. Legler ( Pearl Elaine Hass), Pri. cation instructor in Charles City. H er perman­ '40, is teaching kindergarten in Oakland, Iowa. ent address is Box 187, Fairfield, Iowa. H er husband is a li eutenant serving overseas. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Darling (Lucil e M. Mrs. Carl R. Lund (Doris Harris) B.S. '40, i~ Baxter, Pri. '41 ) a re living on a farm near Sac teaching home economics and science at Geneva. City, Iowa. Iowa. H er husband is in the Army. Mrs. Robert De Witt (Jean Meil s) , K g. '41, is Lucille McBride, B.A. '40, received the habit teaching in Farnhamville, Iowa. Mr. De Witt, of the order at Saint Clara Convent, Sinsinawa. whom she married Nov. 27, 1942, is a farmer \Vi s., on August 4, 1942. She is now Sister near Farnhamville. Mari e E ugene, O .P. Marguerite Dickinson, B.A. '41, is teaching in Mrs. Alvin C. Nesheim (Dorothea M. Gui•· the John Deere Elementary School in East b1·a nson) , E l. '40 is teaching in Rembrandt. Moline, Ill. Her address is 620 16th Ave., East Iowa. H er hu sband is a radio opera tor in the l\,foline. Army Air Corps. Mrs. Richard P . DuBois (Ann L. Houck), Henry A. Peterson, B.A. '40, was athletic B.A. '41, is li vin g in P lover, Iowa, for the dura­ coach in Radcli ff e, Iowa, last year. Mr. and tion. Her husband is a li eutenant in the Army :\Irs. Peterson have a daughter, Mary Ann, Air Coq)s. Mrs. DuBois taug ht in Roland. born Sept. 27, 1942. Iowa, before her marriage June 20, 1940. Mrs. Claude Santee (A rdell Peterson), Pri. '40, Grant Herbstruth, B.A. '41, is the grade prin­ is teaching third grade at Algona, Iowa. He1 cipal and eig hth g rade in structor at Corning, hu sband is servi ng with the Army in Alaska. Irene Schroeder, E l. '40, taug ht the fourth I owa. g rade at Brnoklyn, Iowa during the past Florence E. Jensen, B.A. '41, is music instruc­ school year. tor in Brighton, Iowa. H er permanent address is 1318 State St., Cedar Falls. Since graduation H . Edna Schutt, B.A. '40, has taught for the she has studied at Northwestern U niversity. past two years in L uverne, Iowa, and is now doin g departmental work in the Perkins E le­ Carol E . Johnson, B.A. '41 , is teaching in the mentary School in Buriington, Iowa. Her ad­ Edison building, Gary, Ind. Her address is 453 dress is 615 Franklin St., Burlington. Pierce St., Gary, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Carrol C. Soenke, B.A. '40 and Mrs. Leroy F. Jungjohann (Joyce E. Bu­ E l. '34. respectively, li ve at 1021 McFarland St., shaw), P ri. '41 , is teaching in Preston, Iowa. N orman, Okla. Mrs. Soenke, formerly Anne She was married June 2, 1942. H er husband Placatka, taught in L inwood, I owa, prior to her is in the A rmy. 11 1a 1Tiage. Earl Kellar, B.A. '41, teaches in Joplin, Mont. Martha E. Stout, Pri. '40, li ves at 1407 T hin! Mr. and Mrs. Verna W. Kinsinger (Arlene E . Ave., S.E ., Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where she i~ Marken, El. '41) live on a farm near Eldora, employed at the Collins Radio Corporation. Iowa.

7943 rowA STA TE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Twenty-seven

... Mr. and Mrs. Donald Klitsch (Frnnces Laurie, Mrs. Ruth W. Gordon,- B.A. '42, is teaching B.A. '41 ) are living on Ailsie Drive, Knoxville, fo urth g rade in Fairfield, Iowa. Her address Tenn. Mr. Klitsch i s junior structural engin­ is 106½ West Burling ton St. , Fairfield. eer with the T .V.A. Grace Lynch, B.A. '42, is teaching in Corcor-­ Virginia Lewis, B.A. '41, has a position teach­ an, Calif. H er address is Box 366, Corcoran. in g g rade school music in the Cedar Falls public Mrs. Dorothy B. Hillerson, B.A. '42, is chief schools. She has previously taug ht at Steam­ supervisor of the Junior Service League's war boat R ock and L aMoill e. nursery in \,Va terloo. S he teaches at Grant Mrs. Mary E. Olsen, B.A. '41, is normal train­ School there. H er address is 908 W. Fourth. ing in structor in the Coon Rapids, Iowa, High Yvonne McGrane, B.A. '42, is teaching kinder­ School. Her daug hter, Katherine, B.A. '40, was garten in Cedar Falls this year. She taught in married t o Frank Mitchell, April 4, 1942, and Lamoni, Iowa, la st year. lives o n a fram near Buckingham, Iowa. An­ other daug hter, Vernice, B.A. '41, is doing grad­ Juanita S,teele, B.A. '42, is teaching g rade 3-A uate work at the U niversity of Iowa. H er ad­ in Johnson School, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. She dress is 504 Bloomington St., Iowa City. lives at 205 12th St., E . E . Mrs. R. M. Phillips (Marion Larson) B.A. Lillian Wulke, B.A. '42, is making her home in '41 , is teaching first grade at the Rooseveit Lohrvill e, Iowa. School in Spokane, Wash. She was married Dorothy Milversted, B.A. '43, is training in last May to Dr. Robert M. Phillips, now a the P hysical Therapy Department of the lieutenant in the medical corps in Hawaii . Her O'Reilly Ge neral Hospital, S pring fi eld, Mo. address is 2608 S. Lamont, Spokane. Dorothy Lichty, B.A. '41, taug ht music in the Callender, Iowa, High School during the past year. Her permanent add1·e ss is 1204 Mulberry, \Vaterloo. • • • Aurloine Thompson, El. '41, is teaching at Merna LaRue, '20-'28, and Raymond T. vVin­ Rock Rapids, Iowa. She teaches science, his­ terton were married December 25, l 942. Mrs. tory, hygiene, and geography in the fifth and Vvinterton teaches general science in Mason sixth grades. City, and her husband is in the quartermasters' Mrs. Manford F. Whitney (E. Vivian Miller), corps of the Army. El. '41 , is teaching in Zearing, Iowa. She was Betty Peckham, J .C. '24, was married July 2/J, married Oct. 28, 1942. Her husband is in the 1943, to Howard Imhoff, art director of the J. G. Army. Kuester Adve rtising Agency, York, Pa. Mrs. Imhoff is the a uthor of "Sky Hostess" and 1942-1943 "Other People's Children," which Mr. Imhoff illustrated. Mildred G. Armstrong, Kg. '42, is employed as governess and private tutor to the two small Dorothy E. Willard, El. '24, and Lieut. John children of Little Jack Little, famous orchestra H. Mayer were married December 9, 1942. leader, in Yonkers, N . Y. Her permanent ad­ Lieutenant Mayer is with the Marines overseas. dress is Garrison, Iowa. a nd Mrs. Mayer is teaching. William B. Berntsen, B.A. ' 42, is associate Elsie Graham, Pri. '26, and George Dieleman pastor a nd director o f music at the Scofi eld of Sully, Iowa, were married July 30, 1943, at Memori al Church in Dallas, Tex. H e was mar­ Grinnell , Iowa. Mr. Dieleman is employed as a ried Oct. S, 1942, to Beryl Cutshall, a nd they a re special machinist at Parsons Mfg. Co., NewtoP., li ving at 5216 Milam, Dallas. H e is the e ditor Iowa. of "The Scofield Messenger," a church n ews­ Clara E. Mast, B.A. '26, was married March paper. 5, 1943, to H elmer W . Malstrom 111 San Fran­ Lois D. Coffman, B.A. '42, is teaching third cisco, Calif. g rade in Hig hland Park, Ill. Her address is Corrine B. Preston, B.A. '28, was married Box 634, Highland Park. June 14, 1943, to Oliver Hoyt W illiams, a chem­ Janann Downie, B.A. '42, is teaching physical ist now employed in the U. S. Chemical War­ education in Hutchinson, Minn. H er address fare Division. Mrs. Will iams, M.A. Columbia is 518 Second Ave., S. W ., Hutchinson. University, was formerly assistant professor of

Page T wenty-eight THE ALUMNUS October

, geology and geography at East Texas State 1943, to Sgt. Marvin L eFever. H er permanent Teachers College, Commerce, Tex. Their ad­ address is Lisbon, Iowa. dress is 62 10 Richmond Ave., Dalla s. Carol Jean Knipe, El. '38, and Robert E. Leona M. Thiele, Pri. '30, was married May Fischer were married July 3, 1943. Mrs. F ischer 28, 1943, to Harvey McKenney in Omaha, taug ht in Greene, Iowa, last year and w ill re­ Neb. Mrs. McKenney is teaching in Logan, sume her position this fall. Iowa. Ens. George W. Miner, B.A. '38, was married Eva V. Adams, Ru. '31, was married February June 5, 1943, to Mill icent M. Kimball in St. 21, 1943, to Joel T. Jacobson. They are living Paul, Minn. He attended on a farm near Gilbert, Iowa. Mrs. Jacobson and Stanford University and is now naviga­ formerly taught in Webster County. tion in structor at the Midshipman's School, S/Sgt. Eugene M. Cheney, '31-'33, a nd Sally Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. Fortune were married June 29, 1943. Sergeant Dara Jeanne Pappas, '38-'39, daughter of Mr. Cheney graduated from Parks Air College, East and Mrs. George Pappas o f Gladbrook, Iowa, St. Louis, I ll., with a B .S. degree in aircraft became the bride of Edward P. W ooten, Y. 2/ c administration. H e is now in the Army A ir of \Vashington, D. C., August 6. Mr. Wooten Corps at Atlantic City, N. J. is in officer's training school in Washing ton. Lieut. Gelia Clemans, B.A. '32, and Lieut. Kathryne E . Peterson, Pri. '38, was married Joseph L. Clyde were married J une 30, 1943, in June 9, 1943, to L ieut. Donald Kollman at O r ­ Manchester, Iowa. The bride is in the Army lando, F la. Mrs. Kollman taug ht at F loyd and Nurse Corps at Camp Breckenridge, Ky., and Postvill e, Iowa, before her marriage. They arc the groom i s with the infantry division sta­ now living at 11 2 Grover St., Warrensburg, Mo. tioned there. L ieut. Robert E. Wilkinson, B.A. '38, wa;; In a ceremony April 12, 1943, Marian F . married t o A ntoinette Miele o f Hobbs, N. Mex., Wood, Ru. '35, became the bride of Roger H . March 21 , 1943. McKitrick, a graduate of the University of Cal­ Bernita Brundage, B.A. '39, was married to ifornia. Before her mar riage Mrs. McKitrick Sydney S. Wert, March 7, 1943. Mrs. Wert has was employed by the North American Aviation been grade school music s upervisor in Marshall­ Company, Inglewood, Cali f. town for the past two years. Mr. Wert, field Evanglyn Nehlsen, '36-'38, and Lieut. David engineer for the Carrier Corp. of Syracuse, Scherff were married July 3, 1943. Mrs. Scherff N. Y., is located at St. Louis, Mo., at present. attended the C hilli cothe, Mo., Business College Kathryn V. Hiller, B. A. '39, was married and was e mployed in Kan sas City, Kan., before July 23, 1943, to Harold D . Justice, who is in her marriage. Her husband is in the Army the Navy at Farragut, Idaho. Air Corps at Liberal, Kan., where they are mak­ Florence Neumeier, B.A. '39, of Gladbrook ing their home at present. and Ens. J. Woodrow Christianson, B .A. '43, Grace Hoppe, '37-'42, was married June 27, were married August 21 in Gladbrook, Iowa. 1943, to Leland Sc hutte. They are living on a The bride has been a pianist at the college for farm near J esup. the past fo ur years, and while in school Ensign Mavis Jenson, Kg. '37, and Jerry Olin were Christi anson was a member of Phi Sigma Ep­ married August 11 , 1942, at the Post Chapel, silon , I Club president, student council, Iowa F t. Hamilton, New York City. Teachers First, and Blue Key. He recently Richard G. Kadesch, B.A. '38, and E loise received hi s commission from midshipman's DePue were married July 11, 1942. Dr. Ka­ school at Northwestern university, Evanston. desch, sin ce completing g raduate work at the The couple left August 23 for Salornons, Md .. U niversity of Chicago, has been employed b:,, where Ensign Christianson reported for duty. the Columbia Chemical Division of the Pitts­ Mary E . Willits, Pri. '39, was married Octo­ burgh P late Glass Co., Barberton, Ohio. ber 24, 1942, to W ill iam L. vVantiez. Their ad­ Esther H . Miles, B.S. '37, was married to dress is 4645 Vermont P lace, Los Angeles 27, L ester N. McClary, Jan. 23, 1943. She is an Calif. instructor for intermediate girls at the Glen­ Ella Carstens, El. '40, was married May 26, vvood, Iowa, State School. Her husband is a 1943, to Rudolph Droegmiller. Their home is at W ilson Packing Co. employee. Since g radua­ Cushing, Iowa. tion she has s tudied psychology at the Univer­ Juli Anne Christensen, Pri. '40, sity of Iowa. was married t o Lieut. Russell A. Cantine on June 20, 1943, in Edith Gardner, Pri. '38, was married June 9, Cedar Fall s. Mrs. Cantine has been teaching

1943 row A STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page T wenty-nine in Reinbec k and expects to resume her work Georgia Stock, F ri. '4 1, was married Decem­ this fa ll. H er husband is s tationed at San Mar­ be1· 19, 1942, to Staff Sgt. F red Scovel in H at­ cos, Tex. tiesburg, Miss. M rs. Scovel i s making her home Eleanore Collman, B.A. '40, was married to in Manchester, I owa. Charles L. :1vio naha n, August 19, 1942, at Lake­ Harland E. Troy, B.A. '41 , a nd Dolores Lane land, F la. Nyberg, F ri. '39, were married May 15, 1943, at Elsie M. Crane, El. '40, was married June 9, Quantico, Va. Mr. Troy is a li eutenant in the 1943, to Ralph Vv. Schultz, a fa rmer n ear Kiron, Marin es and is s tationed at Camp Pendleton. Iowa. Cali f. John Lounsberry, B.A. '40, a nd Frances Kit­ Leona A. Wright, E l. '41, a nd Clarence \Vood chell of El Paso, Ill., were married March 20, Jr., were married November 10, 1942. H er ad­ 1943. Mr. L oun sberry is a civilian instructor dress is 1445 Front St., San Diego, Calif. of air cadets at Yale U ni versity, New Haven Shirley Bergum, B.A. '42, was married Dec­ Conn . Their home is at 14 Vall ey Place, North ember 24, 1942, to William F. Carstens. She \,Ves t Hills, New Haven. has been attending a radio school in K ansas Berneice Morrison, K g. '40, was married tu City, Mo. H er husband is in the Army. Lieut. Max B. Ferguson, B.A. '39, on March 28 . Helen Levsen, B.A. '42, and Hugh 0. Rob­ 1942. erts, B.A. '40, were married May 5, 1943. 1\Irs. Frances E. Schultz, B.A. '40, was married t o Roberts taug ht in Monticello, Iowa, last year. D udley N. Steel, June 6, 1943. Since graduation, and her husband coached in Buffalo Center, M rs. Steel has taught in Maxwell and Anamosa, Iowa, a nd Stu1·geon Bay, Wis., p rior to his en­ Iowa. Mr. Steel i s a graduate of the U niver­ li stment in the Army. sity o f Iowa and is now in the Navy. Elaine J. Moody, Fri. '42, and Lieut. Mathew Doris Valz, E l. '40, and Lieut. John W . Stah­ Kwolek were married July 24, 1943, in San An­ ly, '39-'41 , were married May 18, 1943, at Ft. tonio, T ex. They live in H ondo, Tex., where Dix, N. J. Mrs. Sta hly is teaching at H arlan, Lieutenant Kwolek teaches navigation in the Iowa. Army Air Force Navigation School. Dorothy Vogt, B.A. '40, was married Apri! Evelyn Myers, B.A. '42, was married :May 16, 1943, to D1·. Clyde E . A rntzen. T heir ad­ 28, 1943, to Robert C. Hickle, '39-'40, a Kaval dress is 11 20 R oss Ave., vVilkinsburgh, Pa. in structor in Norman, Okla. Mrs. Hickle Mary Mae Wheat, E l. '40, was married April taught in the McCall sburg, Iowa, H ig h School 4, 1943, to Lieut. Sydney Sandilands of the Mer­ last year and is now secretary to th e dean of chant Marines. Mrs. Sandilands is a member the Coll ege of Business Administration in the of the SPAR S. University of Oklahoma. Marjorie Person, B.A. '42, was married July Maxine Bohnett, '41-'42, a nd Cadet Fred 8, 1943, to S/Sgt. James E. Masterson, '34-'35. Weltz, '39-'42, were married July 25 , 1943. Ca­ M1·s. Masterson i s teaching in W aterloo. Her det \Veltz is sta ti oned at Luke F ield , Ariz. address is Mandalay Apts., Cedar Fall s. The bride taught last year in Clarion, Iowa, Adeline Taylor, F ri. ' 42, a nd Donald MacRae and expects to joi n h er husband soon. , B.A. '40, were married July 8, 1943. Mrs. ~fac­ Eleanor Chaney, Fri. '41 , was married July Rae taug ht during the past year in Quasqueton, 28, 1943, to Sgt. Max Sand s. Mr s. Sands has Iowa. T hey are now making their home in resumed her teaching at B lairsburg, Iowa, a nd Solon, Iowa, w here Mr. MacRae is high school her husba nd is s tati oned at Ft. Bli ss, Tex. princip al. Catherine Gilbert, B.A. '41 , and P fc. Donald Lillian Watanabe, B.A. '42, was married June vV. Jurgemeyer, B.A. U ni versity of Iowa, w ere 23 , 1943 , to S/ Sgt. Wall ace Maeda, a graduate married July 18, 1943, in Waterloo, Iowa. The of the U niversity of Hawaii. Mrs. Maeda taug ht brid e taught the past t wo years in Farnham­ the past year in Chester, Iowa. vill e, Iowa. Before his indu cti on into the Army, Marilynn Nolan, E l. '43, and Russel Calkins, the g room was employed in the A li en P roperty '39-'42, w ere ma rried June 26 at the post chapel Cu todian Office, Chicago. They are now living at the S ioux Fall s, S.D., Army Air Base where in Des Moines. Mr. Calkins is stationed. Mrs. Calkins' ad­ Lucille Jones, B.A. '41, and Wilbur J . Cline dress is 1210 W. 10th St., Sioux Fall s. w ere married October 25, 1942. Mrs. Cline has Marjorie Thoms, B.A. '43, was married May been teaching in Maso n City, I owa. 21, 1943, to A. W . Hornung, Inglewood, Calii. Kathleen Murphy, Fri. '41 , a nd Cadet William After her g raduation in F ebruary, the bride J. Girsch, '39-'43, were married June 19, 1943. taug ht in the high school at Nashua, Iowa. They T he bride has been teaching near \Vaterloo. a1· e now at home a t 602 Fir Avenue, Inglewood.

Page Thirty THE ALUMNUS October born June 17, 1943. Mr. T rusler, B.A. '39, is elementary principal of the H edrick School Bvdtu. in O ttumwa, Iowa. • • Mr. and Mrs. Jean Hoffman (Mary North, E l. '37) are the parents of a daughter, Mary E tta Catherine, born F ebruary 7, 1943. They Lieut. and Mrs. W. Glen Cocking (Marci:, also have a son, three. Gri ggs, B.A. '30) are the parents of a son, Rev. and Mrs. A. E . Wilken (Helen K. W il lia m Bruce, born February 14, 1943. They W onders, E l. '37) are the parents of a daugh­ are livin g at Big Springs, Tex., where L ieuten­ ter, K athryn Ann, born April 16, 1943. Rever­ a nt Cocking is in the Army Air Corps. end W ilken is pastor of the Evangelical Church Lieut. and Mrs. C. Richard Purdy (Mary at Merril l, I owa. \,Vil er, B.A. '30) are the parents of a daug hter, Lieut. and Mrs. Noel R. Bacon report the Mary Jane, born May 2, 1943. T hey also hav(' birth of a daug hter, Jane H amilton, July 17, a son, David. L ieutenant P urdy, B.A. '32, 1s 1943. L ieutenant Bacon, B.S. '38. is in the an in structor at the advanced naval school at Navy Air Cor ps at Jacksonville, F la. Ft. Schuyler, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Thornton (Virginia Gable, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Davis (Ali ce F redrick­ B.A. '30) are the parents of a daug hter, Tamara son, F ri. '38) are the parents of a son, Gilbert Lee, born January 17, 1943. T heir address is Kenneth, born October 2, 1942. Mr. Davis, 900 N. Howard St., Glendale, Cali f. B.A. '41 , taught in Iowa Fall s, Iowa, last year, Mr. and Mrs. John 0 . Follett (Ruby John­ but is now in the armed fo rces. son, B. A. '32) report the birth of a son, John Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hartwell (Ali ce Orvil le, J r., on June 25, 1943. T hey live at Nelson, B.A. '38) are the parents of a son, 6 Mell on T errace, P ittsburg h, P a. George Craig, born April 4, 1943. Mr. H art­ Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Cram are the parents well is in the Royal Canadian Air Force, and of a daughter, Mary Beth, born May 15, 1943. their address is 565 A, P eel St., \Voodstock, They have anothe1· daug hter, Susan Dale, three. Ontario. 1fr. Cram, B.S. '34, M .A. U niversity of Iowc., Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Loats are the par­ '39, is servin g w ith the R ed Cross. T hey are ents of a daughter, L inda Lou, born June 23, li ving in \Vest Des Moines. 1943. Before enli sting in the Navy, Mr. Loats, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin M. Johnson a re the par­ B.S. '38, was head of the in dustrial education e nts of a son, E ric Alan, born April 6, 1943. Mr. department at Girard, O hio, H igh School. He Johnson, B.A. '35, received the M.A. degree is no,v an en ::- ig n. from the U ni versity of Colorado, and is now in Mr. and Mrs. Everett D . Alton are the par­ the Army Air Corps. ents of a daughter, Carol Lynn, born D ecem­ Mr and Mrs. Lawrence Goodrick (Mae Felter, ber 19, 1942. Mr. A lton, B.A. '39, is a second B.S. '36) are the parents of a son, T homas li eutenant in the signal corps. Felter, born May 11 , 1943. Mr. Goodrick is Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Wilson (Jeanne head of the mathematics department in Owa­ Russell , B.A. '39) are the parents of a son, tonna, M inn. T heir address is 139 E. U niversity. J erry Dennis, born J une 3, 1943. Mr. \Vil son Mr. and Mrs. William Hillmer (Oli ve M. is a chief petty officer in the Navy. Klingbeil, R u. '36) are the parents of a daug h­ t er, Darl ene /\1111 , born February 2, 1943. T hey have 1·ecently moved to a fa rm nea r Butterfi eld, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Melrose (Merle D . Miller, • • Fri. '36) a re the parents of a daughter, Claudia Ann, born J uly 4, 1943. Mr. Melrose is county Seward Higby, E l. '81, died 111 Cedar Fall!', attorney fo r Buchanan County. T hey li ve in J uly 28, 1943. He was 87 years old. Mr. I ndependence. H igby, who received the L.L.B. degree from Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Thurston (Wini­ the U niversity of M ichigan in 1889, was a well ­ fred Brown, '36-'37) are the parents of a son, known in Cedar Fall s. Ken Brown, born March 16, 1943. Mr. T hur­ ston, B.A. '37, is a yeoman, first class, at Camp Mrs. C. A. Bernier (Kittie Sheridan), B.Di. Dodge, Iowa. He received the M.A. degree '85, died at her home in Cedar Fall s, June 1, from the U ni versity of Iowa in 1941. 1943. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Trusler (Lucil e Vail , F ri. Janet Wilson, B.Di. '90, died March 3, 1943, '36) are the parents of a son, F rancis Garth, in Centerville, Iowa, w here she had been a

· 1943 rowA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Page Thirty-one News A·bout Yourself Blank The Alumnus would like to have you Yourself" blank and mail it to The send in news of alumni in the armed Alumnus, Bureau of Publications, Teach­ forces and news about yourself and other ers College, Cedar Falls, Iowa. Changes alumni, so fill out this " News About of address are important, too.

Name ------( If married, give yaur maiden name also ) Diploma or Degree ______Year ______Rank ( If in Armed Forces ) Present position ______( Include branch of service ) Permanent Address ------Mailing Address ______

Married ------When ( Month, day and year) To Whom

His or her position ______-- ______

Children ______·- ______

Study since graduation and where ______

Additional news about yourself and other alumni ------­

( Cut along this line )

normal training critic from 1927 until her re­ R. Grace Lewison, J .C. '09, died September tirement in 1939. She received the B.A. degree 3, 1940, in J arhat, Assam, India. from the U niversity of \i\Tyom in g in 1926. She Oma Ruth DeWitt, B.A. '23, died May 28, taught mathematics in Panora, Iowa; Center­ 1943, in Ft. Dodge, Iowa. Her home was in vill e, Iowa ; Aberdeen, S.D., and L aramie, W yo. T ingley, Iowa, and she had taught commercial Herman A. Mueller, B.Di. '94, M .Di. '95, died subjects in the high school at H umboldt for the January 25, 1943, in Des Moin es at the age of past 20 years. 76. He had been seriously ill fo r three months Clara G. Attig, P ri. '24, died at Sibley, Iowa, from cancer. Mr. Muell er moved to St. Charles, June 24, 1943, after a n ill ness of fi ve months. Iowa, in I 905 where he lived until his death. She taug ht in Waterloo fo r the past 14 years. He served as mayor of the town and was man­ She is survived by one sister, M rs. M. L. Bald­ ager of the local bank. wm. Jessie L. Harnit, B.Di. 'O J, died in June, 1942, E. L, Dickinson, B.A. '21, died April 30, 1943. after teaching for many years in Decatur, Ill. He is survived by his w ife, formerly Clara E. Mrs. Miriam Woolson Brooks, M.Di. '06, died Primmer, P ri. ' 14, two sons, and one daughter. July JO, 1943, in Mount P leasant, Iowa. She Mr. D ickin son served as superintendent of pub­ was 70 years old. Mrs. Brooks taug ht in Red lic school at Woodward, Mediapolis, and Lone O ak, Iowa, and Minneapoli s, M inn., before her T ree, Iowa. He was a brother of A. D . Dick­ marriage and then was principal of the high inson, B.A. '17, coach at Teachers Coll ege, and school at Cedar Falls. She retired in 1941 a, R. E. Dickinson, B.A. '22, and Warren A. Dick­ vice-prin cipal of the Call anan Junior H igh inson, B.A. '24, both of Marshall town, Iowa. School in Des Moin es. She is survived by a Mrs. Gerald Sitton (Alvertie T ipton), B.A. son, J. Woolson Brooks, a Des Moines archi­ '26, died March 15, 1943, in Waterloo. She tect. was 41 years old. Her husband survives.

Page Thirty-tn•o THE ALUMNUS October ALUMNI IN SERVICE As of August 6, 1943

MEN

Commissioned Non-Commis- Officers sioned Officers Others Total Army 195 100 503 798 Navy 132 45 124 301 Coast Guard 3 16 19 Marines 16 2 38 56 Merchant Marine 2 2 •

WOMEN WAC------18 WAVES ______30 Marines ______2 SPARS------­ 2 Army Nurses 9 Navy Nurses 5 •

Prisoners of war ______4

Missing in action ------5 Killed in action or deceased ______12 •

TOTAL NUMBER OF MEN AND WOMEN IN SERVICE-1,277 • • •

In order to keep important Teachers College war records up to date, all alumni are urged to send in the names of T. C. men and women who are serving Uncle Sam, whether they're in uniform or are doing their part for victory in some other way. Pictures, changes of address and news of pro­ motions or honors are especially welcome. Just as you're interested in knowing what your former classmates are doing, they're interested in you, too--where you are, if you're married, if you have children-so fill in the "News About Yourself" blank on page 32 today.