1973 MARCH • aumnl ne UNIVERSITY OF MIN ESOTA Stepping to the forefront in Teaching & Research ...

~~~~~ NW 'SI10dY3NNIW 3J~Y~9Il AINn lSIAIH)~Y ddY1J 9 3NIXYW S~W 91Y88880086T~T~£l0086Z EIGHT MINNESOTA GLASSES

These sparkling glasses make an excellent gift for yourself or for others. The maroon UNIVERSITY SEAL and gold MINNESOTA GOPHER are baked on for lasting durability and beauty. Safety rims reduce chipping. Weighted bottoms prevent spills. These 12V2ounce glasses are safely packed eight to a carton. Members, $4.00; Non-members $5.25 Minnesota residents only add 4% sales tax to TOTAL.

Minnesota Alumni Association 2610 University Avenue ORDER BLANK St. Paul, Minnesota 55114

Enclosed is my check for $, ___ Please send me ___ sets of eight Minnesota Glasses. Send to: Name ______Address ______

City ______State ______Zip ______editorial POINTS OF VIE

It eems to me that during the last two biennia the Legi lature has become more pohtical and bipartisan in its election of individuals to erve on the Uni versity of Minne ota Board of Regents. The legi lator ' e pre sed reason i to have Regent that are more re ponsive to them .

There are twelve Univer ity Regents, four being elected each legi lative e sion for ix-year terms . Four are cho en at-large, and eight by congre ional di tric!. Other tate do it differently . In orne, the Governor appoints, often with Alum­ ni A ociation input; in other , the Legislature appoin a we do here; and in other, Regent are elected by direct ballot of the people. All method are pre - ently bemg u ed in Big Ten Un! er itie .

At the Univer Ity ' beginnings, the Mirme ota territorial Legi lature elected Regents in a joint convention of both branche of the Legl lature. However, by 1860 the Legi lature had enacted law empowering the Governor to appoint the Regents, by and with the con ent of the Senate. The Chase case of 1928 changed all of that when the State Supreme Court ruled that the power to name the Regents belonged to the Legi lature.

A it governing body, the Regents determine the policy of the niver ity and elect the Chancellor as Chief E ecutive and Pre ident of the Board of Regents. The Regents are the final authority for the governance of the institution. On their ability and integrity re ts the pre ent and future development of the niver- ity .

The University Regents mu t be above politics, beholden to no group or mdiv­ idual, particularly the Legi lature. They mu t be able, con cientiou and de­ voted. They hould ha e orne under tanding of the meaning of a State University and the "land grant" concept. They hould be knowledgable about the Univer- ity' program of teaching, re earch and ervice, as well re pon i e to the need of on temporary education and its tudents . They hould ha e the time, a well a the moti ation, to er e the niver ity to the limit of their abilitie . They hould have the re pecl of the community in which they re ide and be of unque tioned integrity . B reason of their own pre tige and tatu ,the hould bring pre tige and tatu to the nive ity . n indi idual' re ord of ervi e to the Uni er ity, as well a hi being a ni ersity graduate, hould be gi en con- ideration. in a Regent' election.

Minne ota alumni, a oting citizen , have every right to e pe t that the Legi - lature ill elect only the be t po ible candidate for the job.

The Univer ity i till one of the mo t di tingui hed and produ ti e in titution of higher education in the land, but after a evere retren hment peri d o\er the la t t 0 ear, the Univer it mu t ha e adequate finan ing b the pre ent Leg­ i lature if it i to keep its pia e in higher education and be able to ontinue to er e the people of the tate a it ha in the pa t. ow i notthe time to pIa pol- (Conlinul!d on pagl! 4)

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 3 Whitney to coord inate "The bu ine community doe\ not have the confidence it hould POINTS OF VIEW U business cou rse have in the ol\eg of Bu . we \ dmini tration," Whitney aId itics with the selection of the Reg­ Univer ity ofMinne ta bu ine "Thi could be due to a varIety of ents. Now is the time when the tudent will ee busine manage­ rea on , but getting together should strongest and best Regents must be ment from an executive' point of create a climate for better under retained or elected. view through a cour e that will be tanding and a budd-up in Con­ taught by Wheelock Whitney and fidence. " Such men as Regent' a number of other prominent Min­ Leading bu ine men from chairman Elmer Andersen have ne ota bu ine men thi pring. throughout Minne ota will be shown the vision, the energy and Whitney, a fonner chief e ecu­ invited to serve ague t lecturer the organization that i needed to tive officer of Dain, Kalman & for the cour e which will be offered carry the University of Minnesota Quajl, Inc . and a fonner Republican from 2:15 to 5 p .m. Mondays and forward when higher education i candiate for the U .S. enate, aid Wedne day during pring quarter at the crossroads of crisis. Despite the cour e hould accompli h two and i limited to tudent with hIgh his impressive political career, objective : "giving tudent a grade in bu me cour e w r . Andersen has stood above politics chance to hear from and question Profe or Albert K. Wicke~berg in his work as a Regent, and ha people from the 'real world' ofbu i­ and Richard K. Gaumnitz f the maintained the integrity necessary ne , and erving a a bridge Univer ity's department of manage­ to the leadership of an institution between the Univer ity and the bu i­ ment and tran portation will provide like Minnesota. He is a Regent the ne community." academic input tnto the cour e . University needs. He feel that a clo er relation hip between the Univer ity and Twin Citie bu ine men i nece ary.

The New Alumni Club will open on or before September 1, 1973

50th Floor - 1.0.5 . Tower

All Association members will receive an invitation to join the Alumni Club at special rates during a Special, Sixty-Day Enrollment Period in May - June, 1973

During the 60-Day Period Annual Res/dent After the Club Opens dues will be $100.00 with the $30.00 init­ Annual Resident dues will be $120.00, iation fee being waived. (Resident Mem­ plus a $30.00 initiation fee. Annual Non­ bership - those who reside In Henne­ Resident dues will be $12.00, plus $13.00 pin, Ramsey, Washington, Dakota, Scott, initiation fee. Carver and Anoka counties.) Annual Non-Resident dues will be $10.00 with the $13.00 initiation fee being The one membership requirement: You waived. (Non-Resident Membershlp­ must be a member of the Alumni Asso­ those residing outside the seven-metro ciation to be eligible for membership In counties listed above.) the Alumni ClUb.

4 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE John E Carroll '33BChemE • . President Harry E, Atwood '31 BA •••••.• , " First Vice President George T Pennock 34BBA .•• ,Second Vice President Barbara Stuhler 'S2MA . •. . ,Secretary alumni news Franklin 0 Bnese '28LLB .•••..•..Treasurer UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Gerald H Fnedell '48BA S1JD . . ..•. Member Gar! Mack Joseph '46BA •••....••...••••• ,Member Robert Hugh Monahan '43MD • Member MARCH 1973 VOL. 72, NO. 7 Cart N Platou 'S1MHA ..Member Wallace E Salovich 'SOBBA '56MHA •.. Member Thomas H Swain 42BBA , . , . •. ..'. • .. , .Member Oscar R Knutson '27LLB . • Past President Edwin L Halslet '31BSEd '33MA 37EdD ..•.•• Ex. Director in this issue BOARD MEMBERS Term e."l,.. 1973: Fred J Agnlch '37BA. Harry E Atwood On The Cover: The photographs 31BA. Gerald H Fnedell '48BA 'S1JD. Joseph Karesh of EM (Electronic Microscope) 29BA, Oscar R. Knutson '27LLB, MISS Melva E Lind Technic ian Mary Ooka and 24BA. George T. Pennock '34BBA, Cart N Platou '51 MHA, Botany department head Groham J A. Stromwall 'SOBA with his research experiment are Term e."I,.. 1974: Franklin Bnese '28LLD, John E. Carroll Indicative of the excitement of the '33BChem E, Robert G Cemy 32BArch, MISS Manlyn activity In the new Biological Sci­ Chelstrom 'SOBA, Lynn Hokenson '44, Harold Melin ences Center, part of the College '44ChemEng, Robert Hugh Monahan '43MD, Henry N. of Biological Sciences, on the St Somsen, Jr ·32BA. '34LLB, MISS Barbara Stuhler 'S2MA, Pau l campus. Read about the Milton I. Wick 18 facility's dedication on the inside. Term e."I,.. 1975: George S. Ameson '49BEE, Chartes BntzlUS '33BCE '38MSCE, George Gibbs '63BSEd, Leonard C Heisey '49BSB, Gen Mack Joseph '46BA, Kenneth 3 Points Of View p Manlck 'S6BA '60BS '60MD, Richard F. MesSing '43BChemE, Wallace E, Salovich 'SOBBA 'S6MHA 6 A Dedication: To Step To The Forefront Of Term e."/re, 1976: Margaret Fenske Amason '54BSHE, Biology Research And Teaching Terrance Hanold '33LLB, John K. Hass '33LLB, Jerry Helgeson 'S58A, John I. Jacobson '54LLB, Stephen Keating 42LLB, Iantha Powne LeVander '3SBSEd, Dr Troy G 10 The Alumni Bookshelf RollinS '4SMD, John G. Schutz '35, Thomas H. Swain '42BBA. 11 Minnesota Gopher Sports Enthusiasts Form PRESIDENTS REPRESENTING CONSTITUENT GROUPS Patricia McFadden Partndge '438S, Minnesota Alumnae Club The New Gold Country Club M Julian Ertandson '43BS '47MS Colleges of Agnculture, Forestry & Home EconomiCs; Harold G. Haglund 'SOBBA, 13 Minnesota People: Dr. Harold G. Scheie College of BUSIness Administration; Dr. Warren W. Hunt '61ODS, School of Dentistry; Donald A. Sonsalla 'SSBS 'S2MA, College of Education; Dr. George W 15 Governor's Budget Recommendations Reduce Janda '48MD, AsSOCiation; Patrick O'Halioran '60MS, Mortuary University 73-75 Request Below " Bare Bones" Association; Patrick O'Halioran 'SOAMS, Mortuary Level Science; Onalee Fanslow O'Hearn '46GN, School of Nursing; James J. Remes 'S6BSPhm, College of Pharmacy; Alfred E. France '49BA, College of Liberal Arts 17 Minnesota Women: Mattie Sheldon & University College; Norman C. Silver '42METE, Institute of Technology; Dr. John L. Walch '58BA 'S3DVM, 19 Dave Shama's Gopher Tales Veterinary Medical Alumni Association; Ms. Betty Danielson 43BA 'S3MSW, School of Social Work: Ardis Tyndall Nelson 47GDH, Dental Hygiene Alumnae ASSOCiation; Richard 21 Study Predicts Decline In University Enrollments Hytlesled 'S7M '68BS, General College; Mrs. Sandra J Carter '58BS, DIVISion of Medical Technology; 23 Faculty Profile: Dr. Bryng Bryngelson PRESIDENTS, REPRESENTING NON-CONSTITUENT GROUPS 24 The University Greer E. Lockhart '51 BSL '53LLB, Law Alumni ASSOCiation, Donald C. Benson '50SLA, "M" Club. 28 MAA Constituent News PAST PRESIDENTS COMMITTEE Russell E. Backstrom '25BME '27MSME, William F. Braasch 33 Around & About 'ooBS '03MD, Victor Christgau '24BSAg, Frank~n D. Gray '25BA, Waldo E. Hardell'26BSB, Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA, Harry Heitzer '33METE, Hibbert M. Hill '23BCE, Arthur A. Hustad Mary Lou Aurell '62BAJourn ...... , .... ,. Editor '1SBA, Oscar A. Knutson '27LLB, Francis A. Lund '31·'35, Edwin L. Halslet '318S '33MA '37EdD ...... Managlng Editor Virgil J. P. Lundquist '43MD, Joseph Maun '32BA '35LLB, Vergal Buescher ...... Cover and Consultant Artist Harvey Nelson '228S '2SMD, Charles Judd Ringer '36-'41, Glenn E. Seldel'36ME, James A. Watson '42BA, Edwin A. WilSOn Second class postage paid at SI. Paul, Minnesota, and at additional '30BEE, WellsJ Wright '36BSL '36LLB, Edgar F. Zelle '13BA. mailing offices, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Published monthly, from September through June, by the Min­ nesota Alumni ASSOCiation , 2610 UniverSIty Avenue, St. Paul, Min­ HONORARY LIFE ASSOCIATION MEMBERS f1~sota 551 1~ ; telephone (612) 373-2466. Member of the American Dr. J, L. Morrill, President Emeritus of the Unviersity; Alumni Council. William T, Middlebrook, Vice President Emeritus of the Annual Alumni ASSOCiation membership of $10.00 includes a sub­ University; Dr. 0, Meredith Wilson; Gerald T, Mullin; William scription to The Alumni News. Special corporate and bUSiness sub­ l. Nunn, Wilham B, Lock,hart. scriptions available for $5.00 yearly. A DEDICATION: TO STEP TO THE FOREFRONT OF BIOLOGY RESEARCH AND TEACHING

All intere ted biologi ts are T HE BUILDING invited to attend the Gue t Lec­ that is the final step in the com­ ture and Symposium that will pletion of a three-building com­ highlight the Friday, April 13. plex on the St. Paul campus that event urrounding the Center's houses the University of Min­ dedication . A group of dis­ nesota's rapidly growing Col­ tingui hed peaker will addre lege of Biological Sciences them elve to ' 'Fundamental (CBS) is one that will allow that Biology And It Significan To college to step to the forefront Mankind" during the 9:00 a.m. in biology re earch and teaching, to 11:30 a.m . morning hour , according to Richard S . Cal­ and the 1:00 p.m .-3 :30 p .m. decott, dean of CBS. afternoon hour . Lunch will be That new $10 .9 million facil­ available from 11 :30 a.m. to 1 :00 ity, called the Biological Sci­ p.m. For further information on ences Center, will be specially the e activitie , call the B dedicated on April 12 and 13 . office at 373-1190. The Thursday , April 12 , A PLEASANTLY-DESIGNED glass, activities will feature an open wood and tile ramp-way connects house, dedication ceremony , the Biological Sciences Center with special guest lecture and a social Snyder Hall at Snyder's main floor T HE NEW level. function. Biological cience enter, The open house will run from which increa e CB pace by 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m . at the approximately one-third, hou es new Biological Sciences Center on the work of cientific group mo t of the college' genetic and on the St. Paul campus, located howing funding of cience by cell biology unit , with faculty on the corner of Buford and government. paced for interaction, all of the Gortner Avenues, with the A 5 :30 p.m. social hour and botany department and nearly all dedication ceremony taking 7:30 p.m . dinner will follow hi of the ecology and behavioral place at 3:00 p.m. Following a addres . Space for the dinner, biology department. half-hour coffee break in the which will be attended by The e group occupied th e North Star Ballroom , Dan University Pre ident Malcolm new facility during the hri trna Greenberg, head of Science and Moos, a number of the Univer- break of winter quarter in a move Government Reports, will ity Regents and Minnesota that might be called one of the deliver a keynote guest lecture legi lator , is limited to 200 moothe t in the Univer ity's at 3 :30 p.m. in the ballroom people. Re ervations, co ting history, 0 anxiou wa the CB which is in the St. Paul Campus' $8 .50 per person, will be taken fa ulty and student population to Student Center a short distance on a fir t come fir t served ba i ready their new bu i Id ing and from the Biological Sciences and must be received by Elsie equipment for u e. Center. Greenberg, who will Hanson at 123 Snyder Hall, speak to the crisis in federal fund­ University of Minne ota, St. ing of science and research, Paul 55101 by April 3. heads an internationally-known private organization that reports

6 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH --

THE BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES CENTER. on the corner of Buford and Gortner Avenues. holds a number of sophisticated teachmg and research laboratofles . A graduate student IS seen working In one of the research labs in the top picture. The herbarium. which occupies the entIre eighth floor of the new bUilding, is a vast collection of plant specimens. many of whIch are stored m the large black cabinets seen in the photo at the top fight. BIologIcal SCIences students will no longer have to wash their test tubes by hand; Tariq Mahmood. a botany graduate student, operates one of the new large washers in the photo at bottom fight.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 7 The new Center, which i Snyder Hall, built in 1927, ollege i al 0 re pon ible for equipped with the mo t modem wa remodeled to almo t "good dvi ing all liege of Liberal and sophisticated biological ci­ a new" condition in the late Art and Education tudent who ences equipment, should put the 1960' . And Gortner wa built choo e to major in bi I gy a~ University of Minne ota on the in 1964 a a bio hemi try facil­ fre hman and. when they reach map a the place to go to tudy ity . A 11 three of the unit are con­ their junior year , tran fer into biology, according to Dean Cal­ nected , allowing f r the ea y BS to complete their majors. decott . interchange and interfacing of B ,which opened it door One and one-half floor of the the biologi al ciences faculty in 1966, ha hown ub tantJ al building how excellent teaching that Dean Caldecott find 0 enrollment increa e through the laboratories, while out tanding important to the rni ion of the year , inc rea e that ha ve out research laboratory unit are college. distanced nearly all of the enroll­ cattered throughout the facility . " Biology i an interdi cipli­ ment projection for the college , One floor of the eight-floor build­ nary cience," he aid, ' ' and "More tudent are opting for ing i devoted entirely to class­ clo e contact between the faculty biology than we can handle," room in truction in the formal i very nece sary ." Caldecott aid . He noted the sense. The new Center wa funded movement in thi era away fr m The eighth floor of the Center primarily through tate funds that the phy ical cience and into the houses the botany department' were allocated by the 1969 Min­ biological and odal cience . as herbarium, one of the be t in the ne ota Legi lature and by $1 .3 well a the latter' relati n hlp United States, according to the million in federal money . to one another. By definition, the dean . This is a library of plant The three building complex biological and ocial clence are that i used by botani ts, a well al 0 hou e the pecial, large interdi ciplinary field , Cal as other plant scientists, to tudy ophi ticated equipment that i decott aid, while thi i not true relation hips between the e sential to teaching and re earch of the phy ical cience . pecies. in modem biology, uch a elec­ Today knowledge from all A visitor to the building will tron micro cope, ultracen­ field i being brought to bear find that the laboratorie are trifuge needed for microbiology on our problem ,and the ollege replicate of one another and and x-ray cry tallographic equip­ of Biological ience i traIning how little individualization . ment. Suite for two electron biology tudent with dual ba k· The Biological Sciences Center micro cope are centrally ground was designed for the teaching located in Snyder Hall, and are The niver ity made it po i· and research nece ary to ea ily acce sible from either ble for BS t devel p at a time specific biological ciences pro­ Gortner or the Biological Sci­ when both the academic and gram and not for a particular ences Center for interdi ipli­ greater community demanded it individual's research or teaching nary work. h u Id, and at a time when characteristics. Even though the botany re ourc where difficult to " We tried to de ign a building department ha moved it depart­ obtain. that will need little or no remode­ mental office into the new "The progre ive tate of ling," Dean Caldecott aid , Center, many of it faculty till biology at Minne ota today i " and one that will allow us max­ teach clas e on the Minneapoli attributable to the fore ight and imum flexibility in our pro­ campu . CBS maintain roughly action of the Univer ity ' gramming. " half of it faci lities on the Min­ admini tration," aldecott aid . The Biological Sciences neapolis campu and the re t in Center completes a three­ St. Paul in order to meet it com­ building complex that houses mitment to the College ofMedi­ CBS on the St . Paul campus . cal Science , the In titute of This complex al 0 includes Agriculture, the College of Gortner Laboratory and Snyder Veterinary Medicine and the Hall. numerou undergraduate who take elective biology cour e on both campu es. The College handle mo t of the student in ba ic biological cience who move into the applied biology coll ege . The

8 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH -

A CBS CLASSROOM, one of a number in the new Biological Sciences Center, is designed for comfort and maximum use . The classroom pictured at the top of the page has its desks placed in a stepped fashion to the instructor's level, so that the instructor can have more eyeball-to-eyeball contact with his students. Eville Gorham, professor and head of the botany department, is seen at the top right With some test-tube bacteria cultures he is studying. These bacteria were "captured" from the air In northern Minnesota . Joan Steen, a graduate student in botany, checked a text for clues as to how she can start the germination process of some special seeds she is working with . Joan was reading in one of the new graduate student study and office areas in the Center. She IS pictured above at the left. Next to her is the photo of the interior of one of the many refrigeration units that are scattered on the floors of the Center, units that are necessary to the controlled research of the biological sciences.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 9 BOOKS AND THE TEEN-AGE READER: Mrs. Lycan put together a book that A GUIDE FOR TEACHERS, LIBRARIANS provides an Informative overview of Min· AND PARENTS nesota's post-high school education when she needed to help her fou r chil­ dren select colleges. "There is no avail· Alumnus G. Robert Carlsen has able resource where all the information revised and updated BOOKS AND THE Is together in one place. This was a chal ­ TEEN-AGE READER : A GUIDE FOR ALUMNI lenge and we thought that there was a TEACHERS, LIBRARIANS AND need for It. " PARENTS to include new lists of avail­ Parents, high school counselors and able and recommended books and a spe­ OKSHELF high school students migh t find cial chapter on ethnic literature. In order EDUCATION AFTER HIGH SCHOOL a to help the adult to understand teen-age useful reference. The paperback, printed reading, the author discusses the reading by North Central Publishing, St. Pa ul, has experience, stages of reading develop­ 140 pages and sells for $2.50. ment and the teen-ager's world, as well as providing annotated lists of books by catagory. The book, costing $6.95, was published by Harper & Row Publishers graphies for such categories as popular of New York. adult books, classics, non-fiction, bio­ THE CHILD AND HIS IMAGE: SELF " BOOKS AND THE TEEN -AGE graphy and self-help books. CONCEPT IN THE EARLY YEARS READER," in the author's words, BOOKS AND THE TEEN-AGE "demonstrates how one goes about giv­ READER is sponsored by the National THE CHILD AND HIS IMAGE : SELF ing good reading experiences to young Book Committee with the professional CONCEPT IN TH E EARLY YEARS, people, leading them one step at a time endorsement of the American Library edited by Dr. Kaoru Yamamoto '62PhD, up the ladder of readi ng enjoyment." Carl­ Association, the International Reading focuses on that critical period in the hfe sen cautions parents that "you cannot Association and the National Council of of every young child between the ages make your child enjoy reading," and sug­ Teachers of English. of 3 to 10 when he acquires feelings and gests ways parents "can make the home G. Robert Carlsen is a professor and attitudes about himself, his place in the atmosphere more conducive to an head of the English department at the world and his relationship Wit h other enthusiasm for books." University of Iowa and a former president people In his environment. He urges adults to be reasonable in of the National Council of Teachers of Each chapter of the book offers practi· their expectations of the ir teen-agers' English. cal suggestions and Informed commen­ reading abilities and interests, noting that tary on how those who deal with chlldren "most adults do not realize that when the can help develop healthy self-perception. child becomes a teen-ager, he is still The contents of each chapter was growing in his literary tastes just as he EDUCATION AFTER HIGH SCHOOL: developed by an author panel thai is in his physical body. Instead they A GUIDE FOR THE CONFUSED included two speciali sts in curriculum and assume that the teen-ager should be HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR instruction, a clinical psychologist and ready to move into great literature." three educational psychologists Carlsen reminds his adult readers that These panels Ireat the role and pre­ A survey of post-high school education paration of teachers; the world of com­ they themselves did not maintain a steady in Minnesota, EDUCATION AFTER HIGH munication as it IS experienced by the diet of "great literature"; various forms of SCHOOL: A GUIDE FOR THE sensational or sentimentalized romance CONFUSED HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR, (Continued on page 12) or adventure novels can be considered supplies a summary of educational oppor­ as "the popcorn and peanuts of your read ­ tunities along with advice and explana­ ing menu". In addition to discussing types tions of how to take advantage of them . of literature and their place in reading Virginia Lycan '42BA and her son Tom development, Carisen supplies biblio- have described the seven basic educa­ tional divisions in the state and given n._ general admission procedures and finan­ • -tA lie-.- cial information about them. Aside from . S2 .~ ~ R£V?SED ANOl.lPtVJID a short paragraph, they have omitted private professional schools because of Books and the their specializations and because "a stu­ 11 dent who enters one of these has a pretty Teen-age Reader good idea of what he wants and where Education A Guod. forT.. chcn, Uhrlnln. ond Pmnb to find it." The major portion of their book Is devoted to individual descriptions of the After 83 post-high school educational institu­ tions in Minnesota. These descriptions of area vocational­ High School technical schools, state junior colleges, private junior colleges, state colleges, A GU IDE FOR THE CONFUSED private colleges and the University sys­ HIGH SCHOOL SEN IOR tem Include specific information, such as addresses, phone numbers, enrollment figures, male/female ratios, and more general observations on the physical appearances of the campuses, parking and housing situation, course offerings and student life. The Lycans gathered their material from visits to and talks with personnel at all the' schools.

10 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH Minnesota Gopher Sports Enthusiasts Form The New Gold Country Club

Dr. Whitey Langum Ken Yackel TWOMI E OTA football great from the Twin Citie area, Dr. Whitey Langum and Ken Yackel, have joined to head the new Gold Country Club, an organization that will promote the Univer ity of Minne ota football program and perhap help ea e orne of the financial difficultie the Uni er ity' thletic depart­ ment face. The Club, which currently i c mpo edofm rethan50 " M" men and other bu ine ,pro fe- lonal and community people mtere t d in turning football for­ tune around at Minne ta, will have a concentrated tate-wide Gold Country Club member located near mid-field; and if thai dn e for one month thi pring will organize their ale around bu er purcha e 100 Sea on Tic­ to ell bl k f ea on ticket team captain and team mem­ ket ,four ill be located near to bu ine and indu try in the ber , with each group a igned mid-field. tate. Their goal i the ale of to a parti ular area in the Twin Indi idual, a well a blo k 20,000 ea on ti ket to what Citie and the tate. Indi idual of ale to bu ine and indu try Langum and Ya kel predict will who are alr-ead members of the are e pe ted to be made. be out tanding football at G Id ountry Club orne from "If the tate' bu ine and Memorial t dium. a ariel of ba kgr und and are indu try '" on't upp rt Gopher The ticket ale dri e ha been not ne e aril "M" men; an - fo tball, \ 'e won't do well," Dr. lentali ely planned to begm in one wh i intere ted in helping Langum told The lumni e\v. mid-April, falling ahead of the the Uni er it} of Minne ota' The G ld Countr Club i ticket ale ~ r regular ea n Athleti program i in ited t Langum' idea, and one that he ticket holder and the gener I j in th Club. ha been behind wholeheartedl public. H we er, the G Id ea n Football Ti ket '" ill C untry Club dri e will n af­ b a ailabl fr m G ld Country fect the eating f th regular lub member during their football ea n ticket hIder , a pring dri e at the regular 42.00 the 20,000 at ~ r the dri e ea n rat , and the E on m have alread b n a igned in Plan rat f 30. ~ r adult and the tadium . I .00 ~ r children und r 1 and adult 6_ and 0 er. Th e ec n­ om Plan ticket are in the b I nd. The in enti e are th r ~ r the ti ket bu r. If he purcha e 50 ea n Ti k.et , tw i 11 b

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 11 after seeing too many empty PERSONAL RAPID TRANSIT: A seats in Memorial Stadium dur­ COLLECTION OF PAPERS ON A NEW ing the pa t football season, talk­ TYPE OF URBAN TRANSPORTATION ing to many, many individual Four faculty members in the University about Gopher football , and of Minnesota's School of Mechanical and thinking about what could be Aerospace Engineering have edited the first publication to deal almost entirely done to turn the Gopher' foot­ with the subject of personal rapid transit ball image around. (PRT) systems. J. Edward Anderson, J Langum believes that support L. Dais, W. L Garrard and A. L Kornhause have based their book on 26 for Gopher football is important papers delivered at an international meet­ as the University and its athletic ing of PRT designers and urban planners teams are symbolic of the pride held a year ago. PRT refers to a transportation system Minnesotans have for their state made up of vehicles which are and its quality of life . He doe n't automobile-sized and move along fixed believe that the Vikings are too guideways conducting electrical powe r forthe vehicles. It incorporates the advan­ much competition for the colleg­ tages of the automobile, while reducing ians who play in Memorial Stadi­ the disadvantages of air pollution, wasted urn . He pointed out that some of space, expense, varying driver abilities and dangers of weather conditions affect­ the other schools in the Big ing automobile transportation. A transpor­ Ten fill larger stadiums that tation system that is presently feasible, nearly equal the capacities of the PRT offers the privacy, easy availability and non-stop service from origin­ Vikings' and Memorial Stadium For more information GA to-destination of automobiles that other combined. Write to : mass transit systems do not. The 502-page book, entitled MAA Insurance Administrator Both Langum and Yackel PERSONAL RAPID TRANSIT: A P.O. Box 907 refuse to believe that there is too COLLECTION OF PAPERS ON A NEW Mpls., Minnesota 55440 much competition for the ports TYPE OF URBAN TRANSPORTATION, MAA # ______is available at $8.75 10 paperback from dollar in the Twin Cities area the Department of Audio-Visual Exten­ and they are out to prove it with Name sion, 2037 University Avenue Southeast, the Gold Country Club. Address ______Minneapolis, Minnesota. Yackel, who lettered in foot­ City ______ball, baseball and hockey at Min­ State ______.LZip __ THIS SACRED TRUST: AMERICAN nesota, thinks that college foot­ NATIONALITY 1798-1898 ball with all its tradition and color deserves the backing of Min­ Written by Paul C. Nagel '48, TH IS SACRED TRUST: AMERICAN nesota sports enthusiasts, and he NATIONALITY 1798-1898 deals with will do his part to fill Memorial 19th century America's developing self­ Stadium's stands to give impetu awareness as a nation and Its agonizing THE ALUMNI struggle to turn itself into a model republic. to Coach Cal Stoll's winning Disappointing events throughout the football program . century, the author says, left America Anyone wishing to join the BOOKSHELF uneasy and fearful about republican suc­ cess, a view whiCh contrasts with the trad­ Gold Country Club should call itional belief that American nationalism in Kathy Haley at the " M " Club child; the various attitudes, policies, the 19th century was entirely exuberant office (373-4224) and leave their procedures and interactions within the and optimistic. Going beyond the histori­ school environment which influence the cal happenings of the century, Dr. Nagel name and number. developing self: the techniques of studies American self-consciousness and And what of the Gold Country appraisal and amelioration within the examines questions of national character Club after its ticket drive? Lan­ school and home; and the role played by and splril. For his research, he drew from parents in the development of self­ many sources, including orations and ser­ gum hopes the organization will perception In the child. mons, letters, diaries, hymns, books and become a strong group of active A professor of education at Pennsyl­ magazines. vania State University, Dr. Yamamoto has volunteers who will be available Special Assistant for Academic Affairs also edited The Col/ege Student And His to the President of the University of Mis­ to help the Athletic Department Culture: An Analysis, and has edited and souri, Dr. Nagel also teaches history on when it wants them to . written Teaching: Essays And Readings, the Columbia campus of the University Published by Houghton Mifflin Com ­ of Missouri. He has had teaching and pany, Boston, Mass., the-page book sells administrative experience at the Univer­ for $4.95. sity of Kentucky, Amherst College, Van­ derbilt University and the University of Minnesota. His 376-page book was published by Oxford University Press, New York.

12 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH INNESOTA EOPLE

HAROLD G. SCHEIE, M.D., teaching at the Scheie Eye Institute, University of Pennsylvama .

The dedication of the Scheie Eye ophthalmologi t , teacher and wards erved by University of Penn­ In titute la t fall marked another re earcher. syl ania taff and re idents. The achievement in the di tingui hed The doctor, a recipient of the length of Penn ylvania' ophthal­ ophthalmologic career of Dr . University of Mione ola Outstand­ mology re idency program has been Harold Glendon Scheie '31 B ing Achievement A ard in 196 , inc rea ed to 40 month and the '35MD. Following an anon mou a umed the chairman hip of the number of it re iden and fellow- gift of $1 million for the e tabli h­ Penn I ania department in 1960 hip doubled to 24 a year. ment of an eye in titute at the and ince has led the unit in a pro­ Ophthalmolog training at the Univer ity of Penn ylvania, Dr. gram of e cpan ion and impro e­ Uni er ity of Penn I ania Medical Scheie upervi ed the rai ing of the ment. School ha been enriched b Dr. additional $10 million to con truct Scheie' willingne to make him- the building which hou e the Since completing hi intern hip at elf and hi comprehen lve lide col­ ophthalmology department of Penn- the Ho pital of the Uni er it of lection a ailable to medical tu­ ylvania's School of Medicine. Penn yl ania in 1940, Dr. cheie dent. has taught there, tarting as an in- The heie E e In tiMe, hich Head of the Medical School' tructor and be oming a profe or opened in Augu t, 197_, entralize ophthalmology department, Dr. in 195 . Penn I ania' expanded program Schele i internationally known for Hi appointment to The Chil­ and c ntain treatment, tea hing and hi achie ement in ophthalmology, dren' Ho pital of Philadelphia, re earch fa ilitie . Combinino all particularly for hi contribution to Philadelphia eteran' Admini tra­ three of the e acti itie in one build­ the tudy of glaucoma and eye ur­ tion Ho pital and Philadelphia ing - hi h folIo the profe- gery technique . He ha written over General Ho pital a chief of ional philo oph of Dr, cheie and 160 arti Ie and everal book ba ed ophthalmology ervi e increa ed the hi a 0 iate - a ure that upon hi e perience a a pri ate number of patient ,clinic and patient benefit immediatel from

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 13 the discoveries made through scien­ U students serving tific investigation. second term on Dr. Scheie is now trying to rai e an additional $10 million to furni h Regents ' committees the fifth floor of the circular, ix­ Ten Olver ity of MIOne ta ~tu . story building, to provide re earch dent J ined the B ard of Regents equipment, and to e tabli h endow­ in January ann-voting member ment funds for re earch, teaching of the board' committees. The \tu­ and indigent inpatient care. Depend­ dents , who will erve through June ing upon which need i greater, the 1973 when the student repre enta­ fifth floor will eventually be used tion plan comes up for review . for either patient care or re earch . divided themselve~ among the Reg­ The original anonymous gift for ent ' five tanding commlttee\. the building tipulated that the cen­ They will not have vottng power, ter be named Scheie Eye In titute nor will they sit on the Regent ~' exe utive comm Ittee . and be built at the ite of Pre - byterian-University of Penn ylvan­ The\e !>tudent are itting on th e ia Medical Center. Regents' committee. for the e ond Gue t of honor at ceremonie Harold G. Schele year in what the Regent ha e said dedicating the Eye In titute on i an experiment In student represen­ October 12, 1972 , wa Adm ira] of tation on the board. the Fleet, the Earl of Mountbatten Last summer the Regent voted to conttnue the seating oftudent\ of Burma, KG. During World War cerned with the problem related to for a second year tudent group II, a head of the ophthalmology glaucoma, the econd leading cau e at each of the University' five cam­ section of 20th General Ho pital of blindne ,and developed a urgi­ pu e met dUTlng the fall to n minate taffed by medical faculty from the cal technique, generally termed candidate ; on the Twtn Illes carn­ Univer ity of Penn ylvania in Ledo " Scheie Procedure" , for its treat­ pus the tudent assembly formed an Assam, India, Dr. Scheie treated ment. ad h c mmJlt e t nommate tu ­ Lord Mountbatten for an eye injury . A leader in the treatment of con­ dents . While Lord Mountbatten wa genital cataract, Dr. Scheie ha The nomlnati ns fr m ea h am · ho pitalized, the Japane ecutoffthe revived and adapted certain surgi al pu were reViewed b} the tuden! 4th Briti h Army at lmphal Plain, technique now widely u ed in enate n. ultatl e c mmlltee placing the Briti h in a dangerou cataract urgery . He ha al 0 done before they wer fom ard d to Pn:si · position . Lord Mountbatten a ked ignificant work in the reduction of dent Mal olm Moo f r fin al Dr. Scheie to remove his bandage ocular infection, particularly approval . and relea e him 0 that he cou Id han­ through the u e of teriod therapy . The technl al colleges at r 01\ - dle the ituation . Dr. SCheie agreed Throughout hi career, Dr. t nand Wa e a ea h have ne stu­ and Lord Mountbatten was able to Scheie ha held a number of lecture- dent serving on the Regents' com­ arrange tran port aircraft to move hip and con ultative appointment mittee , whlle the campuses at Briti h and Indian troop into the and belong to many ophthalmologi­ Duluth and M rris each ha e t'"' O battle, eventually won by the British cal, cientific and educational tudent , and the Twin itles cam­ and Indian . organization . Hi military ervi e brought him many award, includ­ pu ha four representatives. Hi three years of active service ing a per onal medal from Briti h The 'e tudent repre entatl\ s in World War II gave Dr. Scheie in ludeJudith nderson and Milton Minister of Defen e, Lord Mount­ considerable experience in admini - batten of Burma, in 1964. He has DeJe. u , both Law hool tration and in eye surgery . He wa fre hman. Mi hael LaBrosse . a received recognition for hi work in able to conduct re earch on ocu lar ollege of Liberal rt enl r. and ophthalmology and education from change a ociated with crub Ri hard Nelon, a Law chool many a sociation , including the typhu , an often fatal eye di ease junior, from the Twin Itle cam­ Royal cientific and Humani tic among oldier ,and in va cular di - pu; Larry Fonne. t, an urban . tudle ~ ociety of Gothenburg, the German ea e associated with angiod treaks junior, and Rosemary Tamowsl\l, Ophthalmological Society, the of the retina in p eudoxanthoma a h me e noml eni r. fr In the Egyptian Ophthalmological Society ela ticum, a condition where diag­ Duluth campu; ary G rdon , a and the American Academy of nosis i made by looking into the fre hman, and tephen Hunt. a Ophthalmology and tolaryn­ eye. junior, both in the humanitie!> div l- go logy . Returning to the re erve corp in ion at Morris; Barbara crud, a 1946, and ubsequently the Univer­ ophomore in hotel, r taurant and sity of Pennsylvania, Dr. Scheie in titutiona l management from continued hi ophthalmology r kston; and, R bert Hassett, a re earch . During the 1940's and enior in the agri ultural di ision at 1950's he wrote many papers con- Waseca.

14 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH GOVERNOR'S BUDGET RECOMMENDATIONS REDUCE UNIVERSITY '73-'75 REQUEST BELOW "BARE BONES" LEVEL

MINNESOTA Governor Wen­ dial staff for all other new Univer­ dell Ander on, in hi budgetary sity space, and police and civil ser­ mes age to the 1973 State Legisla­ vice support for the coordinate cam­ ture , recommended a $219.6 miJljoD pu es . budget for the Univer ity of Minne­ The University's approximately sota for 1973-75 , increa ing the $5 .9 million request for plant opera­ Univer ity' budget by about $13 .6 tions was endorsed by the governor, million over the current biennium, a was its In tructional Computing but reducing the in titution ' pro­ reque t, and OASI and Health Plan po ed budget level by $20.4 million . increase . If the Governor's recommenda­ The governor also endor ed the tion are accepted, the University' Univer ity' proposition that $1.2 Maintenance & Operation budget million of it tuition income be would increase $8.96 million over diverted for tuition cholar hip for the 1971 -73 base of$170.7 million, the disadvantaged. but till fall $10.6 million hort of Among the deletions in the the Univer ity ' M & 0 reque t. Univer ity's budgetary reque ts by For the Health Science , the gov­ the tate executive \ ere tho e for ernor upported the Univer ity's Nonrecurring Sy terns and reque t for new po ition , suggest­ Deve10pment in Admissions and ing a funding level of $1 .7 million Record, Unemployment Compen- for the biennium, which would rep­ ation In urance, Education Off et tal State and County Share • re ent 30 new po ilions in 1973-74 for the Uni er ity Ho pital Out­ P ychopathic and Child P chiatric and 15 additionalpo ition in 1974- patient Clinic, the funding of the Ho pital , and for the Rehabilitation 75 . Fringe benefit were al 0 Ore E tim ate Divi ion and the Center and Community Services. endor ed to match the e po ition . Municipal Reference Bureau , a The go ernor has cho en to treat the The Univer tty ' request for well a the increase ought in the Uni er ity' County Share as an Health Sciences civil ervice po i­ upply base of the Health S ience , appropriation while the Uni er ity tions wa also met, for the most part, all academic units of the Univer ity , treats it as income. by Governor Ander on , a hi and the administrative and ervice far a the University' other recommendation of $931,000 rep­ unit . Not onl did the governor not tate Special were concerned, re ented a total of 87 new po itions recommend the latter reque t for Go eroor nder on recommended for the biennium, two-third of 1. million, but reduced the overall an increa e of 3..+ million over the which are ear-marked for the biennial uppl ba e by 250,000. current biennial base of $29.5 mill­ Univer ity' Dental Clinic. The g vernor endor ed the ion, falling $9.3 million hort of the The governor did not endor e the Univer ity ' Cra k ton State pe­ Uni er ity' reque t. University' staff reque t for it cial of $1 .9 million for the bien­ Among these pecial , the execu­ academic unit, which totaled 149 nium, but cut the Wa eca reque t ti e budget would eliminate the new academic position, in addition by $460,000. The latter recommen­ e i ting 1 million Education to a number of new civil ervice dation would add 4.5 new a ademic post for the academic, admini tra­ and 5.5 new civil service po ttions Ii v and ervic sector of the to Wa eca in 1973-74. and 4 Univer ity. academi and 1 more ci il er ice He did however, a k that three position in 1974-75 . of Minnesota' s civil er ice requests U of the niver ity's Ho pita] be funded fully: cust dial taff for Specials were fully recommended, new Health cien e spa e cu 10- t taling 12 .5 million for the Ho pi-

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 1S indicated that no increa e 10 the proportion of co t hould be bome by the Univer ity tudent. (Editor's note: See the 1972 November and December i sue of Equipment Special, the Lake Univer ity' Special reque ts for The Alumni New for a complete Superior Ba in Study, the Veteri­ three UMD In tructional programs delineation of the Univer fty'S nary Medicine Teaching Hospital in Basic Medical Sciences, Dental 1973-75 budget requests.) request, nearly the entire proposi­ Hygiene and Social Work , the tion for Continuing Education and Rochester Exten ion expansion, the Extension, the Legal Services Spe­ Center of Urban and Regional cial, and the Allied Health and Affair Special, the Mu eum of College of Pharmacy Nursing Special. Natural Hi tory programs, and the gets neighborhood Some of the Univer ity's State request for Busine and Economic health care center Specials were partially endorsed by Research at Duluth, Special Educa­ study grants Governor Ander on: the Graduate tion and Training Re earch, the School General Research Fund In titute of Child Development, The ollege of Pharmacy (reduced by $525,000); Summer Ores Research, and the Veterinary recently received a 60, 0 grant Session (reduced by $407,000); the Diagnostic Laboratory. to provide pharmaceutical ervlces Library Special (reduced by Anderson al 0 endorsed the fund­ at three SI. Paul neighborhood $780,000); special funds for the ing level recommended by the health care center . National Defense Student Loan University for Medical and Cancer The two-year National Tn titute and the Health Profes ions (recom­ Re earch, P ychiatric Re earch, of Health grant will be u ed to end mended at the current level with an Control of Hyperchole trolemia, tudent to the We increa e if matching funds are Geological Re earch, Multiple Neighborhood linic , the Martin available); the Family Practice Spe­ Sclerosi and Neurological Luther King enter and the Helping cial (reduced by $241,000); the Di ea e , Rural Health Phy ician Hand Health enter and to re truc­ Drug Abu e Information and Edu­ Associate Special , Univer ity Ho - ture part of th if curriculum. cation Fund (reduced by $100,000); pital Patient Transportation fund­ The college received a 10,000 and the Hospitals Graduate ing and the Affiliate Ho pital grant from Northland Regi nal Research programs at the University Undergraduate programs. Medical Program to tudy the of Minnesota Hospitals, Hennepin Although the Executive Budget cooperative arrangement between County General and St. Paul­ Recommendation was to have u ed Helping Hand enter and two com­ Ramsey (reduced by a total of the Univer ity's tuition income munity pharmacie . The tudy ' approximately $2 million) . e timate, which wa ba ed on a objective are t analyze the e no ­ The governor recommended a tudent' bearing 26.5 percent of his mic fea ibility of providing drug to Fire Information Research and Edu­ educational financing load, the low-income patient n a liding cation Special of $86,000 for the Governor's budget mes age implie feed cale and t determine the biennium, which the University did that thi tudent load would increase degree of patient cooperation in a not reque t, and fully endorsed the to 34 percent, even though he program f pre ribed drug therapy .

16 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH Inn•

By Dorothy Edwards Heitlinger '37MA

Mattie Sheldon began climbing when he learned to re ad . For her, it was e ential to have a quiet place, where.undi turbed, hecouldcarryeverya ailablebook. and pur ue each new idea and adventure. The tree hou e he built wa called E cel ior. after the embryo village in Mmne ota where he wa born on May 22. 1860. ecure in her lofty hide-away . with the rope ladder pulled up behind her, he read a de cription by Jo eph C k of the dreadful di ease and po erty in India and the great need for medical help. e pecially for the women . he determined. then and there, that he would leave the pri tine beauty of Lake Minnetonka, to become a medical mi ionary , erving the Indian mas e . India. however, would be her tepping- tone to the Hunalayas, and aero to the fabled land of Tibet. She planned to be the fir t white woman to cro the Tibetan border from northe tern India . 0 far as he kne ,and o far a we can di cover. he wa ! The Reverand harle Burt heldon, her father. had three daughter when hi poor health forced him to gi e up hi dream of foreign mi ionary work. He headed we tward from OhiO : "With diffi ulty I found my way a ro the praine and through the wild region between Mtnneapoli and E cel ior", he wrote on 0 lober 16, 1855. He tayed, and had eight more children, the nmth Emma Hart Willard could have u ed Mattie Sheldon of whom wa named Martha 1ma . he w the one a an example of what he meant when he \ rote: who would do what he had n t been able to d . " Edu allon hould eek to bring i ubje t to the perfe - tion of their moral intellectual and ph ical nature, in order that the may be of the greate t po ible u e to them el e and other ." The author of this article, Dorothy Edwards Heitlin­ At 19, after teaching tw term of ountr) hool. ger, IS the grand neice of Mattie Sheldon . and erving a pre ident of the W .C .T .. , Mattie took Mrs. Heitlinger's family shows a strong UniverSity her aving to Mmneapoli , and enrolled in the tate of Minnesota background : her great-great uncle. Uni er it) of Minne ota, graduating ~ ill year late[\; ith wh ose name was Edward s, was a member of the highe t honor . The Program for the CI O a E r- Terri torial Legislature responsible for the founding of the Universi ty of Minnesota ; both Mrs. Heitlinger ei e ,Ma 29. 1 , Ii t the 2 member f that I and her father received their Master's degrees from and re ords that M. . held n ga e the . '1 Oration" . the Universi ty, and her son, Mark Edwards Heitlin­ he had taken a giant t p to\\ ard her mountain , but ger, is currently at Minnesota working on a PhD he till had a I ng wa t go. in geography. Medi al h I in the late 1 00' t k a very dim Mrs. Heitlinger recently completed a fou r-year ie of female appli an ,but Mattie \\ a. admitted to term as secretary of the Greater New York chapter of the Minnesota Alumni Association .

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 17 the Boston School of Medicine, and received her MD four forbidding mountain passe, int Tibet. he under­ three years later with the be t record in all subject , took the e great adventure with a minimum of equipment including urgery, of any medical tudent in her cia s . and a ma imum f faith and courage. ometime he She had no choice but to specialize in eye, ear, no e went disgui ed in native co tume, lipping pa t entinel and throat di orders, however, becau e of her ex! and over ice field , wading in icy tream , and for 109 Did she know then that the Tibetan monks uffered her elf t follow m untain trail on f ot when her hor e more than the average number of cataract , and that her refu ed to go any farther . There were occasions when skill in removing them would pave the way for a welcome he wa drawn up precipice by mean of heet ti ed into the forbidden Holy Place of Tibet where the around her wai t. It i recorded that he did not eem maroon-clad lamas would be her grateful patient? Did to uffer fr m the dreaded mountain ickne which was this knowledge ease her frustrations? the despair of many who dared to undertake uch a jour­ She worked at practical nursing in Bo ton to support ney . Perhap he wa too bu sy concentrating on the for­ herself, and to end whatever he could pare to her bidden Tibetan language, which he had per uaded a parents and their growing family. She did ho pital work man from Lhas a to teach her. She put it to good use for a year, while pleading with one missionary board along with her kill in removing cataracts and goiter after another to end her to India. Even her own father' and her remarkable succe in ea ing the uffering of denomination refused her! lepro y . Not until 1888, when he wa 28 years old, did Mattie At the end , her native companions cared tender!> for succeed in overcoming thi la t great fru tration , ailing all her need , and he died, at 52, ju t a the un' for India, via England, on ovember 17 . On board hip , rays reached the veranda where she lay . Mattie i buried on Christmas Day, after he re ponded to a toa t, the on the ide of a mountain above the hou e where he big Scotch Captain brought down hi fi t with the remark, had worked and prayed for 18 year . Earthquake have "She is the cleverest woman I ever heard; I only wi h damaged or destroyed much of her legacy , but have not I were 30 years younger!" touched her grave. Mattie arrived in India on New Year' Day , 1889, after 55 day at ea. FindingIndia's woman " in need of mental and piritual awakening," he employed all her cholarly and creative ability in translating the mo t difficult of local language and dialects, some of which had no written form, and in introducing the best of poetry and mu ic , areas in which she had great talent a well a enthu iasm . N HI HE It took seven long, difficult years to achieve her goal of working in Bhot, on the border of Tibet and Nepal, and then only because he was willing to give up her small salary and become completely elf- upporting . Nepal wa equally discouraging, but he made friends with the Nepalese border guard who allowed her to YOUR cross the roaring Kali River, between steep mountain, on a swaying hewn-log uspen ion bridge, to work her AVlNGS medical magic on their ailing countryman . Of the e years, a companion wrote, " he tended the sick inside and out ide of hospital, managed and taught industries, was translator, travelling teacher, and vet­ erinarian." She introduced agriculture by buying land, • Minnesota 's only planting her grain in carefully terraced fields and garden , mutual savings bank where the nomadic natives camped on "the highway" to Tibet could observe them . Orchard thrived, a gri t mill ground grain, cattle and sheep were inoculated • Service since 1874 against disease, modem looms aved hour and day of tedious toi I, a hospital and di pensary aved and enhanced lives by the thou ands each year. Her Middle­ western style of hospitality earned the praise of famous travelers and weary herdsman . A little church thrived on participation and prayer. There i no record of the number of times Mattie did what to her was most important of all: make the dangerou , difficu lt trek, on foot and hor eback, over FARMERS AND MECHANICS S AVINGS BANK O F MINNEAPO LIS Te le pho n e 339-2515 / M e mber F. 0 I.C .

18 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH --

They call them the Bierman "jocks". And they suffer from a certain amount of razzing as well as anonymity on the University of Minnesota campus. The members of the fledgling University women's intercol­ legiate athletic program are searching for funds and a Univer­ SIty department to answer to ; in a word, the Bierman "jocks" are searchmg for their identity. Women's intercollegiate sports had their beginnings in the mid- 60 's, but, until this academic year, the program carried the label of extramural. In the past, extramural or club sports were on a limited budget with funds pro­ vided by the University intramural fee and the Women's Physical Education department. The interest and participation of University girls prompted an eventual change in status from extramural to intercollegiate, according to Dr. Eloise Jaeger, Physical Education director. " In 1963-64 we started out with three extramural teams," Dr. Jae­ ger recalled. "By extramural, we mean student organized and run teams which play a limited schedule against competition outside the University. As time passed more teams and par­ ticipants joined the extramural ranks. About three years ago, our program had actually be­ come more intercollegiate than extramural. "By then the Physical Educa­ tion department was supplying coaches and administering all the sports. "We now have nine intercol­ Before the end of the school years and has no desire to be legiate teams (field hockey, vol­ year, Drs. Jaeger and Belmar burdened with additional non­ leyball, swimming/diving, basket­ Gunderson, extramural director, revenue sports. ball, gymnastics, track and field, hope to meet with the Assembly A more feasible alternative golf, tennis and softball) ; so we Committee on Intercollegiate would put the program under the decided, before this past fiscal Athletics (ACIA) to find a official direction of the Physical year, that the time had come to to both. Education department and Dr. stop labeling our program Two alternatives are apparent, Jaeger. Such a move would give extramural and call it intercol­ but only one appears workable. Dr. Jaeger the additional respon­ legiate." First, the ACIA, which has author­ sibility of an athletic director - This move raised the questions ity to regulate University athle­ a role she is prepared to accept of what department intercol­ tics, could place the women's if the Physical Education depart­ legiate women's sports would program with the men's depart­ ment is provided adequate fund­ answer to and where their fund­ ment. However, the men's athle­ ing for intercollegiate sports. ing would come from. Neither tic department has been running Although Dr. Jaeger will not be question has yet been resolved. a financial deficit for several quoted, sources say she is some-

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 19 what perplexed at the sluggish­ majors taking part in women's certain amount of verbal jabbing ness with which University intercollegiate sports. Ms. from friend and foe . " Let's face administrators have directed Schenker, a senior majoring in the fact that our society still their attention to women's inter­ Urban Studies, discovered the doesn't accept girls participating collegiate sports. "There seems women's tennis program during in some sports like softball, field to be a feeling among some Welcome Week when she trans­ hockey and basketball," she people at the University that this ferred to Minnesota from said. " This is supposed to be whole thing is just a fad ; that in Michigan State two years ago. degrading. time it will pass," said one source. " It's really amazing the number " But I really don't care what Funding for the present school of kids who don't know there is people think. I love to compete year came from I-M fees and the an intercollegiate program for and the program here is providing Regents' reserve fund of unbud­ women," Ms. Schenker said. a much-needed opportunity for geted monies. Each source con­ "The teams are open to anyone those of us who want to partici­ tributed $5000. Last June, the who wants to try out, and I'm sure pate at the top level of athletics. program's organizers submitted that with more exposure we We have an opportunity to play a budget request of $44,000 to would have more girls out. " against the best girls at our the University's central administ­ Last year about 40 girls turned school and others in the state and ration . out for tennis, but only 12 suited the Big Ten . We could never have "We are grateful for the budget up for meets. Six girls made out­ this with just an extramural prog­ we have, but it places us under of-town trips for meets because ram . certain handicaps," Dr. Jaeger of a limited travel budget. " I wish more people wou ld said. "We're very limited in our The women's coaches, who come out to see us. I think a lot travel, and must carefully watch are instructors and teaching of people would be amazed at other expenditures." assistants in the Physical Educa­ the efficiency and seriousness Funding promises to be a prob­ tion department, combine the with which we compete." lem long after the women's place­ philosophies of extramural and In time, perhaps the program ment question is resolved. At will have strong spectator recog­ Minnesota, intercollegiate sports intercollegiate sports. They encourage all girls with an inter­ nition, and its teams will have have the tradition of being self­ est to participate, but they do play schedules as lengthy as those of supporting. The women's pro­ their best girls in a meet. the men's, instead of only a few gram could face harassment if it meets per season. is supported by tax dollars, while Some of the girls feel there the men's program is self­ should be more emphasis on And perhaps a degree of stabil­ supporting. training. During their season, ity will come to a coaching situa­ Despite these problems, teams will practice three and four tion where each sport has a new women's athletics are slowly times a week; however, practice coach nearly every year. establishing themselves. Dr. sessions are sometimes short Even though it's beginning to Gunderson reports that well over and not always under supervi­ sound like the men's program, 200 girls will participate this year. sion. Dr. Jaeger says certain pitfalls Probably more would participate "Our girls are competitive to a must be avoided. if they knew about a program that point, but many don't push them­ "We're not interested in recruit­ has not received much exposure, selves to the final pOint of ing or falling under the except in the Physical Education achievement," Linda Polley said. of producing winning teams to department and at the Bierman Ms. Polley, a senior majoring in bring in funds," she said. Field area where the girls prac­ physical education, participates Otherwise the Bierman tice. in track and field, basketball, field "jocks" are striving for equality Dana Schenker, who com­ hockey and volleyball. with the men. And it may not be petes on the tennis team, is one Ms. Polley's athletic versatility long before they sport M jackets, of the few non-physical education has made her the subject of a or at least M sweaters I

20 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH STUDY PREDICTS DECLINE IN COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Enrollment in all public under­ graduate college and univer itie in Minne ota, except t. Cloud State College, will decline by 1985, according to a tudy released in mid­ February to the Hou e higher educa­ tion committee of the 1973 Min­ ne ota Legi lature . The report , titled "Public Col­ lege Enrollment in Minne ota' ChanglOg Population Pattern 1970- 1985", al 0 predicted harp de­ cl ine 10 the number of tudent attending nearly all of the tate junior college . The tudy of full-time undergrad­ uate enrollment based its predic­ tion on population and migration tatl tic and tudie of areas erved by the tate' college . junior col­ lege and the niver ity of Min­ ne ota y tern . The report, which was the out­ growth of a eminar at the niver- ity and publi hed by the Center for Urban and Regional Affair (CURA), wa mo tty written by Enrollment prediction will ur i al of out tate campu e i John R . Borchert, CURA director; generally follow population growth dependent on attracting an in reas­ Thomas G . Morten on, a re earch pattern, a ord1Og to the report . ing hare of their enrollments from fellow for budget planning and "The de line in ollege-age population erved in the past by the infonnation ervice ; and Arnold R. population will directly affect Twin Citie campu .. of the Univer- Alanen, who i now an a i tantpro­ enrollment earlie t and relati el} ity, the report aid. fe or at Virginia Polytechnic greate t out ide the major growth The tudy , hich con idered In titute and tate Uni er ity . regi n of the tate," the ' tud) " tertiary education" to in lude all St. loud tate College i found, and " relati ely lea t and lat­ po t-high chool edu ation e cept e pected to grow from 8,203 tu­ e t in the metrop litan area and graduate and profe iona! hool dents in 1970 to ,263 in 19 5 for neighboring campu e ." and exten ion Ie, aid that in an incre e of only one percent 0 er dramatic 75.7 percent in re e 1970 the 66, 00 Minne ota high the 15-year period. a predi ted f r In er Gro e chool graduate could choo~ e Moorhead tate ollege will Height Junior ollege in a Twin among 1 tertiary educational uffer the mo t eriou decline in uburb. II other juni r col- in titution in the tate. tudent , according to the report, lege iUlo e enrollment b 19 5. Beginning in 1960, the birth rate with a 10 of25 percent of it enroll­ ith the mo t eri u 10 - 43 per­ began to de line . "The number of ment. cent - predi ted at Rain Ri er high ch 01 graduate in [inne ta outhwe t tate College and th Junior ollege in Internati nal Fall \! ill peak in 1977 at about 76,000, Uni er ity of Minne ota, Duluth, ith apr je ted I of 131 fu lltin1e then decline I wi to ab ut 7 ,000 ar e pe ted to 10 e 17 and 16 per­ tudent, the tud in 19 O. Then, follm ing the birth cent, re pe tivel ,the tud aid . trend t ward in rea ing num­ cur e et 1 ear earlier, the The Univer it)" Twifl Citie ber of Twin Citie tudent attend­ number of high h I graduate campLl i expected to 10 e one per­ ing ut tate ampu e wa predi ted will drop t 6 ,600 b 19 2 and ceflt of it LInder radLlate enroll­ t ontinue. ill re later," the ' tud predi ted. ment, the report aid. " t pre ent the organiz tional Recommendati n to aile iate

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 21 orne of the pres ures on higher future for area vocational technical day-care parent understand h w education foreseen by the report in titute , but generally predict children devel p. nit are offered included the u e of student financial orne continued growth and later n the Importance f creativity, aid, redefinition of liberal educa­ tabilized enrollment for them, imagin tion, emotion, co peratlon tion, increasing emphasi on con­ Morten on said. and gr wth in children, and the ways tinuing education and better coordi­ The report aid that mo t of the in which children can be taught elf· nation among institution . recent growth of higher education e tern, self- nfidence and resp n- Student financial aid, the report wa a cri i re pon e re ulting from ibility for their own acti n . aid, may increase student mObility a harp increa e in the number of "De pite the Wide pread use of and make it more likely that Twin 18-year-old in 1964 and 1965. family day-care, the quality of thl Citie tudent could travel to out­ The percentage change in tate care i h ckingly uneven," E~ther tate campu e to attend school. college and Univel ity undergrad­ Wattenberg. director of the nl\-er- A tendency to overempha ize the uate enrollment proje ted between ity' Office of areer Develop­ ervice function and problem- 1970 and 1985 in the tudy are: ment, aid recently . "The purpo e oriented studies at the ex pen e of Bemidji State College -14%; Man­ of thi. trainmg project i to Improve a liberal education wa noted in the kato tate ollege -10%; Moor­ the quality of family day-care tudy. head tate College -25%; Southwe t offered to children of workmg par­ "Americans have an information State College -17%; I. Cloud State ent who e care is paid for chiefly overload - more facts than we College + 1%; Winona tate College by federal fund ." know what to do with . The need -4%; U ofM, Duluth -16%; U ofM, Parent involved in the program continue to grow for a ba ic Morris -11%; U ofM, Twin itie can al 0 participate in group dl cu.- framework of knowledge upon -1%. sion held In their own which to sort and relate the rna Change (in percentage) in en­ neighborhood by niver it of facts," the report aid, in citing rollment at junior college over the faculty member trained to deal with the need for a "modem, revitalized IS-year period, according to the re­ their problem . I 0, a telephone liberal education." port, will be; Au tin -27.9; Brainerd hotline i open after each clas to The study recommended better -21.6; Fergus Fall -34.6; Itasca in offer referral and advice on chlld­ coordination among exi ting in tltu­ Grand Rapid -41.8; Northland in care problem . tion a an alternative to increasing Thief River Fall -11.3; Rainy Riv­ the number of college, junior col­ er in International Fall -43 .0; lege or University campu es. "The Rochester -5.1; Willmar -31 .4; tate now ha the physical compo­ Worthington -37.3; Hibbing -29.6; U hospital plans nent of a fu lIy developed y tern Mesabi in Virginia -29 .3; Ver­ nurse oncologist of tertiary campuse ," it aid . milion in Ely -29.6; Anoka-Ram ey training program "The presence of a local junior inCoonRapid -16.4;lnverHill in college greatly reduce the number Inver Grove +75.7; Lakewood in program to train nur e to care White Bear Lake -10.5; Metropoli­ of tudents who migrate to a four­ for cancer patient I being year campus in the fir t year of col­ tan in Minneapoli -10.0; Norman­ developed at the Masonic Memonal lege. " dale in Bloomington -II .0; North Hospital at the nlver ity . ccord­ But the report warned that Hennepin in 0 eo -10.6. ing to Dr. B. J. Kennedy, profeor "placing a new institution of higher of medicine and director of medical education in a town or region a an onc logy. the nur e on ologi t will in trument of economic growth be pe ially trained to work through hould at least be questioned and U program trains public health nur ing program . probably rejected in future pol icy family day-care community ho pital and cancer con iderations.' , parents at home pecialty ho pital throughout the The report's prediction, which country. are based on e timating a stabilized Family day-care parents tn Ram- He aid he expe t the program rate of high school graduate attend­ ey, Dakota and Wa hi ngton to e tend the nur e' role in re earch ing college, may be too high because counties are learning m re about the ludie at Ma onic Memorial Hos­ the rate of student attending college care of young children this winter pital and in the coordination of pe­ has decrea ed since 1970, Morten­ at home. cial treatment . son said in an interview. ince January 9, the Univer ity Program development is being Becau e the study wa ba ed on ha been offering a TV training made p ible with a grant from the 1970 data, he said, the impact of program, "Preparing hi ldren for Minne ota Ma o n through the Metropolitan State College is not the21 t entury",onKT A-TV, Ma onic Ho pital Fund, Inc. With measured, but he said it could take hannel 2 for fami lie that ffer the a i lance of a nur e c n ultant student from the Univer ity in the day-care in their homes. in ncology, D r . Kennedy will Twin Cities, St. C loud State 01- Thecour e, which i being shown define the program c ntenl and then lege and Mankato State ollege. from 8:30 p.m. t 9:00 p.m. for II eek 10 al and national funding to The tudy doe not detail the week, i designed to help fami ly impl ment the training pr gram .

22 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH " The main thmg for me i to faculty profile know that I can control my tuttering and that people can under tand me when r do," he aid. Dr. Bryngel on aid that one important part of hi therapy was to teach individual that thelT tutter­ ing was in no way a handicap. "We tried LO get them to tum a liabiIJty into an a et," he aid. " We empha ized modifying total behavior, beginning with exerci e to trengthen voluntary control over peech. "AI 0 much ado was made in the area of emotional hygiene. The tut­ terer were taught tv thInk about their feeling , attitude and pre­ judice toward them elve and young man tood in front of other. the movie camera and microphone In addition, they were required wearing a new uit and tie, hi hair to take a "healthy do e of advertis­ neatly combed into place. Hi ta k Dr. Bryng ing their problem to tranger." Thl involved introducing them- Will tmple - to gIve hI name, age, where he wa from and a little bit Bryngelson elve to trangers on campu and about hun elf. having a con e ation with them. Trymg de perately to speak, the " Incidentally." Dr. Bryngelson young man tood there uttering a aid, " the tutterer were managed long chattering tring of ound by clinician who were imbued with whIch no one c uld under tand. A IntefVle ed in 1973, three of the a di ciplined '10 ing care' for chrOntC tutterer, he wa one of a tutterer (who a ked that their people. In any program of behavior group of young people who had name not be u ed had orne inter­ modification. patients need under- come to the Untver ity ofMinne ota e ting thing to ay about their tanding of what they might be 'all peech linie for treatment of e perience at the nive it). about.' We tried to make thi hap­ advan ed peech difficultie . One, a ucce ful 011 di tributor, pen. Our ultimate goal was LO make The year w 1949 and the head aid laughingl , "I only tutter them their own clini ian for their of the climc w Dr. Bryng Bryngle­ when I talk. The re t of the time, own problem ith the final re pon- son fler eIght week of inten ive I'm fine ." Hi life-long hobby in e ibility for their uc e re ting with "psycho-talk-therapy," the ame lea ing the ni ersity clini in 1949 them . young man, with con iderably Ie h been publi peaking and he has .. tuttering has been a puzzle to difficulty, told the camera hi name entered e eral pee h-making con­ people for at lea t _200 ear ." Dr. and me thing about him elf. 0 te with the Toastma ter Club Bryngel on added. " 0 one has the did the other young people. The International . right to ay the ha e all the were under tandable . "Tell people it' all a hoa: ," aid an wer . In 1949 e ere trying to t the end of the eight week another man, a u ce ful 0 ial orrelate it with ph iology. r e therapy program, they then had to rker. "We came here to get een about 14,000 tutterer by no'W do the harde t thing of all for a tut­ 'cured' and e're till tutterer ," and rna kno'W Ie about it than terer to do - return home . he aId, peaking carefuU - et when I tarted . I kno'W tutterer get "The mo t difficult thing I an quite clearl . an emotional beating from other think f ~ r a tutterer to d i to 'T e learn d that there are m re hi h th d n' t de en e . The talk t hi parents, hi tea her, hi important thing on earth than main thing i that they realize the friend, and try to e plain what he' peaking perfectl ," aid a third are normal human being ." been doing all thi time," D r. Bryn­ man, wh ing in hi chur h h ir. The on1 formal treatment gi en gel on, n w 82 year old aid. " tutterer ne er tutter wh n the the tutterer \\ a that r eived in Follow-up filming wa m d f are inging, alth ugh l' e often 1949. The film, d umenting their ~he gr up in 1952, 1957 and again w ndered what would happen if I progre v a re ent! h wn at the In 1972 - twenty-three year fter tarted t block hen trying to rea h niver it} . Te hni a1 dire tor ~ r treatment. Ea h time, each memb r a high n te o the film a D nald ain. \\ h al of the gr up t Id the amer" ~ r did the riginal filming in 1949. the re rd, mething about them- (Continut'd on pag ~4) elve .

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 23 THE UNIVERSITY

Memorial Stadium doming ing continue to hamper good u e of ent . The fir t, called the ltimate discussed by Regents the playing field and facility in Scheme, would provide a 65,000- general. eat covered tadium for approx­ David Geiger, chief ron ultant imately 22 .2 million, or $246 per While community leaders in the on the Memorial Stadium tudy and eal. The cheme would include the Twin Citie metropolitan area have a member of the New York con- upgrading of all tadium eating, been di cus ing and voting on the ulting engineering firm of Geiger, replacement of the lower ectlon plan for a Downtown Domed Berger and A ociate, presented a of tadium eating ha 109 poor Stadium in the City ofMinneapoli , plan for doming Memorial tadium viewing angle , enlargement of the the University of Minne ota Reg­ that would al 0 renovate the fa ility playing field by dropping the current ents, faculty and admini trator got for full u e by the intercollegiate field 12-feet and adding telescopmg their first look, in early February, athletic and phy ical education eat at the field Ie el, addition of at a model and detailed illustration department. Geiger wa the a econd tier, IP eating and a that recommended an air-cushioned de igner and engineering architect pre box, renovati n of the tadlUm dome for and the remodeling of of the air-cu hioned dome on the fa ilitie at the plaza level, comple­ Memorial Stadium . U .S . Pavilion at Expo 70 in 0 aka, tion of a modem athletic center at The model and illustrations were Japan. He was joined in his Memor­ the ooke Hall end of the tadlUm , part of a feasibility tudy on the ial Stadium presentation by Robert and include full air-conditioning. future use of Memorial Stadium L . Browne, an architect-de igner The ompromi e cheme, which which had been partially funded by for Ga ner-Nathan-Browne of Educational Facilities Laboratories, Memphi , Tenn. Inc. that cho e the Univer ity of FACULTY PROFILE. . . Minnesota for such a tadium study. The two men propo ed an encap­ sulation of Memorial Stadium that The Univer ity is only one among Born in Ottsco, Minne ota 10 a large number of educational would dome it with a pecial alf­ 1891, Dr. Bryngel on "retired" in titutions in the country having cu hioned double-fabric membrane and was named Univer ity Profes­ stadiums covering large acreage of of fiber gla coated with Teflon and sor Emeritu of peech and Pediat- land that are used only a few times enclo e the horse- hoe end by ric in 1960. De pite hi during the year. The purpo e of the ooke Hall to provide a full-time " retirement", he is an active study wa to find out how such land facility with year-around u e for re earcher, planning e era) pro­ and facilities could be put to better intramural and phy ical education, ject and working on a new bo !. use by the institution . pectator event and for community He i the author of the well-!.n wn Memorial Stadium, which covers uses book , Per onality Development: almost II acres of prime campus An air- upponed roof tructure Getting Next to YOllrself (1965), land at the University, is de ignated proved to be the economical cover and Know Yourself: a Workbook/or for full occupancy only five or six for the Stadium, the tudy showed. Those Who Stutter (1944), a well time during the year for home foot­ And the u e of the pecial fiber glas a nearly 100 ani )es on speech . ball games. Installation of artificial fabric would require no lighting dur­ stuttering, handedne ,reading abil­ turf has increased the u e of the ing the daylight hour. ity and per onality. - by Bill Haf­ facility for touch football , oftball Four renovation and doming ling, Univer ity of Minne ota I­ and jogging, but weather and light- chemes were presented to the Reg- ence Writer.

24 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH would c st $16.5 million or $184 39,608 (down 2,232 from fall quar­ Graduate school dean per seat to a 64,000- eat facility, ter); the Crook ton campu with 674 forecasts difficult wou ld not include the econd tier , (up 14); Duluth with 5,315 (down financial trouble VI P eatIng and a pre box, 173); Morri with 1,678 (down 85); upgradIng the poor eating nor and Waseca with 342 student (up The Univer ity' Graduate enlargement of the playing field and 22) . School may be headed for financial full aIr-condition ing. omparative enrollment figure A Football cheme, which would for everal of the Univer ity units trouble as a re ult of cutbacks in co t 14.1 millton , would provide how that the CoIlege of Liberal federal and tate uppert to advanced education, May Brod­ 62, seats to a covered tadlUm , Art had 15,526 tudent enrolled beck, Graduate School dean told but not an athletic center; the fourth by the econd week of winter quar­ a committee of the Board of Regents cheme, a Minunum cheme, co t- ter, compared wJth 16,687 for faIl ing 10.3 mlIlion would provide a quarter; recently. " It' going to be a di a ter," 56,000- eat covered tadium with General ollege i down 286 tu­ multiple u e pace at the ooke Hall dent, with 2,530 regi tered for Dean Brodbeck aid. " Demands on end winter quarter compared with 2.816 our pecial appropnation for for fall; re earch ha e increased five to ten­ In the Health Science, 2,667 are fold and we now can fund only 30 enrolled for w10ter compared with percent of the reque t from our 2,747 fall quarter; faculty for re earch projects." University winter Total funding of graduate educa­ enrollment drops The In titute of Technology how 3,397 regi tered for winter. tion has remained roughly teady, less than usual compared WIth 3,559 fall quarter; he aid, while inflation and and, demand on ad anced re earch and The number of tudent enrolled The College of EducatIOn i education ha e increa ed. A a for wlOter quarter at the ni er ity down 167 tudent . from 2,523 fall re ult, the niver ity' rankmg in I four percent Ie than for fall quar­ quarter to 2.356 inter quarter. graduate education, e cept agricul­ ter 1972. The Office of Re earch and Infor­ ture and the health cience, ha e Yet to niver Ity admini trator mation of the ational A ociation declined nationally relati e to a thi percentage J an encouraging of tate ni er nie and Land­ number of other uni er itie, be ign. Grant College AS LGC) re­ aid. " Ba ed on pa t e perience, ported in January that enrollments at The dean noted that the quality enrollment for winter quarter i u u­ tate and land-grant uni er itie in- of graduate education can be ally i percent Ie than for fall," crea ed lightly Ie 10 fall 197'2 impro ed through increased funds tanley Kegler, pecial a I tant to for re earch fund for getting high­ than did enrollments for the nation' Pre ident Malcolm Moo, aid. caliber graduate tuden and re iew count of regular day-time tu­ college and uni ersitie a a hole . of all graduate program . " All of dent taken at the end of the econd ailable tati ti howed an en- the e co t mone) , " he aid. wee k. of winter quarter how a total rollment growth of 1.8 percent over "We could 10 e all of our i t- of 47,489 on all campu e , com­ fall 1971 ~ r the tate and land­ ant hip and fellow hip \ hich are pared with 49,929 for fall quarter, grant uni er Ihe compared to a 2 all federall funded, and that i the a dr p of 2,440 tudent . percent increa e in all of the nation' wa v e get g d graduate tu­ The rate of retention of tudent higher edu ation unit ~ r fall 1972 . dent ." on the Twin itie campu account The LG office ited elf- Regent Le ter Malkerson que - almo t entirely for the drop being impo ed lunit on enrollment and tioned hether the ni er it Ie than e pected, Kegler aid. the fa t that th draft i no Inger hould be admitting more tudents ome 2,2 fewer tuden enrol­ a threat to tudent a the main into Graduate hool hen PhD led for winter quarter on the T 10 reas n for the I w-do .... n in enroll­ graduate are unable to get job . Citie campu , while pa t e peri­ ment growth. Other limiting fa tor Dean Br dbeck aid that negati e ence led Kegler to e pect 2,900 noted were that more tudent are rep rts of the job market ba e been fewer tudent t return for winter beginning their liege education at e, aggerated. quarter. ommunit coIlege, and that the "In 1970-71. unemplo ment The enrollment picture at the incr a ing co t f edu ation at the among ience d torate wa onl coordinate campu e i ju t ab ut tate and land-grant in titution pr - 1.4 percent, and 1.9 percent among as e pected, Kegler aid, with hibits the enrollment of ome tu­ engineering d t rate • compared to Crook t n and Wa e a howing dent . an erall unempl ment rate of .9 norma l winter quarter incr a e . percent." he aid. Som tudent enroIl only ~ r inter quarter at the t 0 techni al 11 ge . Winter quarter fig ure for ea h f the ampu h w the Twin itie campu with a winter nrollm nt of

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 25 Dean Brodbeck admitted, how­ ever, that the ituation i "very bad for Engli h and po sibly hi tory doctorate ." She aid that her department, which i philo ophy, ha placed all of it doctorate . The dean aid that the job market cannot be predicted when a tudent enter chool and that a ociety get more ophi ticated the demand will increa e for people with advanced education. Regents' Chairman Elmer L. Ander en aid the Univer ity hould allow tudent to enter field they want regardless of the job market. "There' anotherpartofthe Univer- ity' re pon ibility and that i to help people achieve their own goal ," he said. At a full board meeting in early February. the Regents voted to amend the civil service rules to allow the use ofsick leavefor women unable to perform job dutie because of pregnancy. Roy Rich­ ardson, director of personnel. aid this brings University civil en' ice rules into line with Health. Educa­ tion and Welfare department reg­ ulations. The Regents also passed a re olu­ tion to recommend to the Legi 10- where u h ervice are limited . Unive rsity adopts ture significant improvement in the Included in the curriculum are new television policy retirement benefits available to cIa room and clinical-practice University civil service staff. who learning e periences in hi tory tak­ new te lev I), Ion p II are included in the Minnesota State ing, phy ical e amination kills , Univer Ity of Mmne t ha been Retirement system. Retirement indication for lab and -raye am , ad pted followmg everal months of benefits for Minnesota's state and nursing management of patient meellng with ther edu allonal employees currentl rank 36th out with minor acute illne e and institution and br adea ter With tabilized chronic illne e . of41 statesfor employees who retire wh m the ni er ity will 0 perate after 30 years of service. and 39th Clinical-practice cxperience i in pr du ing and tran tele vl- out of 41 for those who retire after 'upervi ed by phy icianl>; classroom i n program ranging from enter­ 20 years of service. material i pr vided by traveling tamment to la e . nur ing fa ulty member from the The Regents have pproved the Univer ity. econd f an anti ipated three-part Nine tudent already are broad a ting p Ii Y on the recom­ enrolled: one in ore t Lake mendation of it edueati nal p hCy University starts (Minn.), two in Thief River Falls, and long-range planning committee one in Mahnomen, and five tudents The fir. t egment fthe ni er Ity'S new nursing program in the Twin ities area. Employ­ planned policy i& for radio and wa~ ment ite vary from a h spital, approved by the Regent. last June. A pilot project to prepare regis­ nur ing agency to a private phy i­ tered nur e to a i t physicians in The third part, ' heduled ~ r presen­ cian's office, clini, outpatien tation to the Regents in June 1973, del ivering adu It and geriatric care department and cho lofnursing. has been started by the University. will dea l with cable televi i n. The five-month School of Public The new tclevi ion polic I' Health program expand the role of de ignetl t "utilize the medium \)f nur e with recent work experience televi ion ... to carry out (the to provide increa ed preventive and Univer ity's) missi n of education, health-care ervice to the adult population , particularly in area

26 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH re earch and public service, and to and drama by Black writer of the been a member of the niversity JOfonn the public of how the e mi - 20th century. faculty ince 1949. ions are betng accomplished," the Three upper eminar are al 0 "My per nal de ire to return to policy ~ t ate . among the offering thi quarter. teachmg. coupled with the increas­ Peter Roll, ~peclal as I tant for "Alternative Future for Man", ing tre s of admini trative dutie , media re ouree to Vice PreSident which will meet from 4:30 until 8:30 has re ulled in thi decision, which William hepherd, noted (hat the p .m. on March 4 and 18 , will be I have been con idering for everal policy will greatly increa. e a cess taught by Arthur Harkin , UOlver- month ," Turnbull aid . to (he public through presentatl n Ity a i tant profe or of hi tory of Vnivel ity-oriented event and and philo ophy of education . The program . Much of the nlver ity's emtnar fee is $17 which include televi ion programming Will be pro­ meal . Local man fills duced in facilitie now under con­ " Iternative to the Famtly" , Employee Relations post ~tru lion on the Mtnneapoli cam­ taught by Univer ity p ychology pus ' We t Bank . profe or John Brantner, will meet WIlham C . Thoma. 34, of 001- The new poll y will empha ize April 12 from 6 to 9 p .m . The em 1- den alley. Minn ., was appointed the planning, production and dl - nar fee, which al 0 Include the Univer it} of Minne ota a 1 tant tribution f matenal on video tape meal, i 8.50. director for employee relation in to tele i lontatlon throughout "P ychic Phenomena", taught mid-January Minne ota, rather than the Iran mis- by Profe or Mulford Q . Sibley, According to Roy Richard on. ion of program will meet from 4 :30 to :30 p.m . who be ame niver ity per onnel The pollc} tate\ that the Higher on April 1 and 8. The eminar fee officer in December, Thoma ' Education oordmatmg ommi,,- i $17, including meals. dutie will be to work wIth him in ion (H ) will be the coordinat- All three eminar ill meet in " the centralization of all per onnel ing body through which the niver­ the t . Paul campu' tudent admini tration on a Olver it}-wide Ity' \ T operatl n will cooperate Cenler. basi, in taff de\elopment, fonna­ With other edu atl nal broadcaster pring quarter begin at the tion of comprehen ive per onnel JO Mtnne~ota nivef!>ity March 2 and run until data. and on compen ation y tern Th H interin tltullonal June 15 . and the handling of collecti e bar­ televi I n committee wa involved For further regi tration infonna­ gaining relation ." JO the final revl!>ion of the poli y, tion, contact Women' Program, Thoma . who has been on the job along With tudent , the provo t of niversity of Minne ota, 200 We - ince Januar} 1. will re eive an the ni er~lty" four out- tate cam­ brook Hall, MinneapoIJ 55455 annual alary of 24.000. puses, taff member of the OJ er- The ni er it} did not condu t ity'~ media re~ources department, a fonnal earch for an mdl\ idual to and repre entatlves of KTC -T fill the po t Th mlll> hold in e he and the Mldwe t Educational CLA associate dean \\ as one of three candidate recom­ Televl~lon etwork . Turnbull to mended for the po ition Ri hard. n relinquish duties now hold . ince 1967 Thoma ha been employeed b} Hone}well. Inc . • John O . Trunbull, 01 er tty Registration now open rno t recentl} a a i tant market a iate dean of the College of for spring quarter manager for the re idential di\ i i n Liberal r~. ha notified depart­ of the Minneapoli branch, a po 1- Women's Programs ment head of hi intention to relm­ qui h hi adminitratlve dutle tion he a umed in epternber 1971 . effective June 30. 1973 . Thoma h Id a ba helor of education degre from orthe tern Turnbull. 9, I a tmg dean of Illin j ni\ ersl!} and h earned the liege during the wmter quarter graduate credit in indu trail rela­ leave of Dean E . W . Ziebarth. ti n . Last ear he \\ awarded a apr fe or of nomic and Bu h Leader hip Fello\\ hip by t. a member of the graduate fa ull}' f th h I of Public ffair. he Paul' Bu h Foundation t attend Har ard' profe. i nal h of will return t fu lItime teaching. He 01 management. H I the uthor of ha. continued t teach at Ie tone everal publi hed paper on la r cia each quarter, Including a number of continuing educati n relation and per nnel manage­ la e, durmg the nine ear he ha ment. and 1 a lumm t f r the been an a iat d an of the l- Twin City Ob rr r- t. Pall I un . lege. He a - hairman of th e n mic department bef re h wa nam d a iat dean and ha

ALUMNI NEWS. 1973 MARCH 27 GENERAL COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION TO present Outstanding Achievement Award to TV personality Dave Moore

Twin Cities television personality Dave Moore '49BA, Edina, Minn., will be among those General College per­ sonalities who will be honored at the General College Alumni Association's Seventh Annual Meeting on Friday, April 6. Moore, who is well-known for his newscasting and Dave Moore theatre work in the metropolitan area, will receive the University's Outstanding Achievement Award at the meet­ ing. Others who will be honored include Fred Dresser 'SSAA, vice president and assistant to the president of He has been active in a number of area associations Midwest Federal, Minneapolis, who will receive the Alumni and charitable drives, included the Boy Scouts, Ame rican Service Award ; George Gibbs '63BSEd, Rochester, Minn., Legion, Jaycees, United Fund and Chamber of Commerce , with the personnel division of IBM Corporation, who will this year serving as general chairman of the Henne pin receive the General College Alumni Association Member County Cancer Crusade. In mid-1973 he will become vice of the Year Award ; and Dorothy Sheldon, an associate president of the National Association of Accountants, a professor in the University's General College, will receive New York-based professional aSSOCiation. the General College Faculty Member of the Year Award. Dresser jOined Midwest Federal in 1965, and in January Dave Moore joined WCCO-Television in mid-19S0 as of this year was appointed assistant to the president. He a general staff announcer, working as a commercial previously was with the UNIVAC Data Processing Ce nter announcer, talk show host, part-time newscaster, sports as a manager. announcer and emcee for a number of audience participa­ George W. Gibbs, who is also a board member of the tion shows. Minnesota Alumni Association, is a past president of the Seven years later Moore was named the station's Ten Rochester chapter of the Association. O'Clock newscaster, a position he has held ever since . A U.S. Navy veteran who holds the Presidential Unit Currently he is the anchorman on The Scene At 6 and Citation and the Congressional Silver Metal, Gibbs serves Scene Tonight, and host of the Sunday public affairs pro­ on the executive board of Home Loan Savings and on gram, "Moore on Sunday". For ten years, from 1962-1972, the advisory board of Creative Housing in Rochester. He he wrote, produced and announced "The Bedtime Newzs", is a member of the executive boards of the American a late Saturday night satirical newscast that was very Red Cross and the Olmsted County PTA Scholarship popular in the Twin Cities area. Foundation, committee chairman of the Social Concern An Army veteran, Moore served from 1943 to 1946, Work and People to People programs of his church, as mostly in Europe. During the last months of his service, well as chairman of the United Negro College Fund of he was with a "Soldier Show Company", appearing in Southeast Minnesota. over 2,000 dramatic performances before his fellow ser­ Gibbs has been active in numerous leadership vicemen. capacities with the Rochester PTA, the Rochester Mayor's Moore's avocations are athletics and the theatre. He Commission on Downtown Redevelopment, the United is an active speaker and lecturer and had made many Methodist Church, the YMCA Adventure Guides and the appearances before civic and educational groups. Rochester Chamber of Commerce. He is a past president Fredrick J. Dresser of Minneapolis helped to organize of the Rochester branch of the NAACP and of the NAACP the General College Alumni Association, and served as Minnesota-Dakota Conference of Branches. its first president and on its board. In addition to speaking Professor Dorothy Sheldon, a member of a "student­ on behalf of the University's General College in the Twin centered" teaching staff, stands out in the minds of General Cities metropolitan area, Dresser has served the Min­ College students and alumni as a mentor who consistently nesota Alumni Association on its board, as alumni rep­ made a special effort to understand and express the stu­ resentative to the Union Board of Governors, and on dent point of view. She has shown her commitment to numerous important committees. He is currently a member young people by serving as an advisor and counselor of the Association's Scholarship committee. to a variety of on-campus and off-campus student groups

28 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH --

Dorothy Sheldon Fred Dresser George Gibbs

Inner City Youth League of St. Paul and the Junior League Project at Glen Lake. CLASS OF 1933 PLANS 40TH REUNION The General College Alumni Association's Annual Meet­ Ing IS scheduled for the Holiday Inn Central in downtown Judge l. Fallon Kelly is chairing the committee Minneapolis on April 6. A 6:00 p.m. social hour will precede that Is planning a Class of 1933 Fortieth Reun­ the 7:00 p.m. dinner. ion on May 31, 1973. The event, which will have AI Vaughn. dean of the General College, and Ed Halslet, an evening dinner and program format, is scheu­ executive director of the Minnesota Alumni Association. died for the Town & Country Club in St. PaUl, will also be present for the program activities. Minnesota. Reservations for the event, at $7 .50 per person. can Marlon Schroeder Arling and Harriet Thwing be made by contacting the General College Alumni Holden are serving as co-chairmen of the re­ Association, University of Minnesota, 2610 University union. Avenue. St. Pau155114. telephone (612) 373-2466. Reser­ John Carroll, president of American Hoist & vations must be in by April S. Derrick and current president of the Minnesota Alumni Association, will be the event's featured speaker.

MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Two awards are particularly cherished by Professor names new officers for 1973·74 Sheldon : the 1965 Minnesota Student Association Award for leaching excellence and a 1970 award given by Univer­ Dr. George W Janda '48MD, Minneapolis, has been sity campus Indian students for her "outstanding achieve­ named preSident of the University of Minnesota Medical ment in promoting the establishment of the Indian Studies Alumni ASSOCiation. Department at the University of Minnesota". Serving as first vice preSident is Dr. Richard l. Engwall Before coming to Minnesota she taught In an Oklahoma '56MD, Minnetonka. Minn. ; as second vice preSident, Dr. high school, junior college, women's college and coeduca­ Donald D. Dahlstrom '62MD, Minneapolis; as secretary, lIonal college. After earning her master's in English from Dr. Irving C. Bernstein '42MD, Minneapolis; and as Oklahoma University, she came to Minnesota to do more treasurer. Dr. John A. Nilsen '53BA '57MD, Edina, Minn. graduate work and to teach part-time In the General Col­ Board members include Dr. Gerald T. Mullin. Jr. '58MD, lege. She has remained here. except for a year's leave Edina, Minn. ; Dr. Donald H. Peterson '40MD, St. Paul; of absence, and today is an associate professor in the Dr. Philip J. Worrell '60MD, Minneapolis; Dr. Lois A. Ansel­ literature, Philosophy and Communication division of the men '62MD. Excelsior. Minn.; Dr. E. Duane Engstrom General College. '57MD, Edina, Minn.; Dr. E. Theodore Palm '46MD, Min­ Continuing elements in MIss Sheldon's profeSSional neapolis; Dr. Howard A. Andersen '43MD '50MS, Roches­ ca reer have been her work with minOrity group students ter, Minn.; Dr. Charles E. Crutchfield '60BA '63BS '63MD, and numerous formal affiliations with youth groups. She St. Paul; Dr. Leonard l. Kallestad '39MD '46FACS, has also served the community as a member of the Gover­ Wayzata, Minn.; Dr. Rodger R. Lundblad '61 MD. Edina, nor's Committee on Correctional Campus and Correctional Minn.; Dr. Mary H. Pennington '43MD, Minneapolis; Dr. Institutions, as a member of the advisory board of the Konald Prem '51 MD. Minneapolis; Dr. Elmer R. Salovich University YMCA. on the board of directors of the Twin '58MD, Edina, Minn.; and Dr. Richard C. Tucker '50MD, Cities International Programs, and as a consultant to the Minneapolis.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 29 z:q

DR . BARBARA KNUDSON,left, dean of the University of Minnesota's University College, talked with Redwood SCHOOL OF NURSING ALUMNI Association preSIdent, Falls (Minn.) area high school students, Darla Hultquist, Onalee O'Hearn, at left in the foreground, chatted Kent Meyers and Greg Hurner, following the 1973 with University of Minnesota School of Nursing student Annual Meeting of the Redwood Falls alumni. leaders from the sophomore, junior and senior classes The girls and Mrs. O'Hearn were attending a special meeungofthe Alumni Associauon's board in the CHIP Student Lounge on January 17 to d,scuss student REDWOOD FALLS (MINN.) alumni chapter needs and alumni activIties with the student leaders. hosts University College dean and twenty­ three area students at meeting

More than 70 alumni, friends and guests heard Dr. Bar­ bara Knudson, dean of the University of Minnesota's SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY ALUMNI University College, at the Annual Meeting of the Redwood ASSOCIATION is gearing up for State Dental Falls chapter of the Minnesota Alumni Association on Thur­ Convention and mid-November Annual sday, February 1. Meeting programs Among the guests present were 23 area high school students, and Regent and Mrs. George Rauenhorst. Dr. Roger Fredsall '46DDS, Minneapolis, IS chairing the New officers elected at the meeting Include president, School of Dentistry Alumni Association's and Dentistry Wolfgang Sarrazin '69JD; vice president, Mary Abrens Century Club's booth programs at the Minnesota State Wetmore '71; secretary-treasurer, Robert Palmer '47- Dental Convention in Minneapolis on April 30, and May CivE. Past president is Mary Schottenbauer Flinn 1 and 2. Dr. Fredsall is vice president of the Dentistry '46BSHEEd. Alumni Association. Members of the Redwood Falls board of directors are Dr. Tony Romano of the Minnesota Dental School IS Margaret Smith Fitzpatrick, Robert Nelson, Larry Nelson, heading the Association's Annual Meeting committee that Gordon Kelley, Nancy Estebo and Royce Russell. has scheduled the event for Friday, November 16. on the University of Minnesota campus. The general theme for the Annual Meeting is " Preser­ vation of the Dentition". The event's morning program will SCHOOL OF NURSING alumni will hold special include a lecture presentallon in Mayo Auditorium; follOW­ Alumni-Student Meeting for senior students ing a luncheon program in Coffman Memorial Union, dental and their guests alumni can attend a series of afternoon mini-clinics In the new School of Dentistry building, as well as tour the new The School of Nursing Alumni Association will host a facilities. special meeting between alumni and senior nursing stu­ The all-day meeting will be fOllowed by the Century Club dents and their parents and guests on March 8 at 7:30 Banquet at the Radisson Hotel Friday evening. On Satur­ p.m. in Mayo Memorial Auditorium. Each of the senior day, November 17, a Post-Alumni Day Seminar will be students will receive a University of Minnesota nursing held. cap from members of the alumni board at this time. Minnesota alumnus Dr. Donald Erickson is the new Among the special guests at the occasion will be School president of the International College of Dentists . A of Nursing dean, Isabel Harris, who will talk about the general practitioner of dentistry in Minneapolis, Dr. Erick­ history of Minnesota's Nursing School, and a representa­ son has been involved for a number of years in the tive from the Minnesota Alumni Association. activities of the International College , This organized Refreshments will be served. group of dentists is engaged in promoting dental care There is no admission to the event which all School in the world, and through this function, has been an impor­ of Nursing alumni are urged to attend. tant instrument of International good will.

30 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH PRESENT AT THE MEN'S TABLE for the 1973 Mmnesota Alumnae Club 's Champagne Tea & Fashion Revue were, from the center to left, Cathy Moos, daughter of President and Mrs. Moos who IS a student at St. Paul's Macalester College; University President Malcolm Moos; Fred Dresser 'SSAA, assistant to the president and a vice president of Midwest Federal who has been active in University alumni work; Bruce Carlson '6SLLB, husband of model Noel Carlson; Bob Odegard, director of University Development and executive director of the University of Minnesota Foundation; AI HeImbach '42BBA, a past president of the Minnesota Alumni Association and a vice president of Farmers & Mechanics Savings Bank of Minneapolis; Dr. A. Cabot Wohlrabe, a Minneapolis internist who graduated from the University and husband of model Jean Wohlrabe; Richard Gehring 'SOBA, executive vice president of UNIVAC, St. Paul; Otto Quale '40BAJoum, executive vice president and general manager of New World Communications, Inc.; and Ed Halslet, executive director of the Minnesota Alumni Association.

Jean Schlemmer

MINNESOTA ALUMNAE CLUB'S 1973 Champagne Tea & Fashion Revue draws largest crowd in its history

Over 500 alumni and friends of the University of Min­ nesota attended the Minnesota Alumnae Club's 1973 Champagne Tea & Fashion Revue on February 10 at the Holiday Inn Downtown, Minneapolis. Those who attended the two-hour afternoon event added substantially to the Alumnae Club's Undergraduate Women's Scholarship program that benefits the increasing number of well-qualified women seeking a higher educa­ tion, while enjoying the conviviality of a University benefit in an atmosphere of Viennese music and refreshments sparked by the color the exciting new fashions for women. Among those University of Minnesota faculty wives and alumnae who modeled Bjorkman's of Minneapolis colorful contemporary fashions in resort & travel, sportswear, day wear, evening and outer wear, and bridal dresses were : Tracy Moos, wife of University President Malcolm Moos, and Marge Brinkerhoff, wife of University vice president for finance, operations and planning, James Brinkerhoff;

Suzanne Delong Brixius '61 BA, Excelsior, Min n.; Noel Larson Carlson '65BA '67MSW, alumnus Mary Kenney Cox, Minneapolis; Dorothy Duga '43-'47 , Roseville, Minn.; Karen Johnson Irey '62, Minneapolis; Iantha Powrie LeVander '35BS, St. Paul ; alumnus Toby lane Pohland, Mendota Heights, Minn.;Jean Schlemmer '68BAJourn, Minneapolis; and Jean Watson Wohlrabe '47BA, Min­ neapolis. University Home Economics alumnus and 1965 Winter Carnival Queen Carla Augst LeVander served as commen­ tator for the Fashion Revue, giving ample news of the fas hion as well as the University scene to those present.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 31 Minnesota Alumnae Club first vice president Darlene Kalfahs Haskin '62MA, Mendota Heights, Minn., was general chairman for the Champagne Tea & Fashion Revue, while board member Margot Auerbacher Seigel '44BAJourn, Minneapolis, handled the fashion part of the program. Other chairmen responsible for the success of the 1973 benefit were Alumnae Club treasurer Andrine Olson Wunsch '40BSHE, Minneapolis; historian Irene Kreidberg '30BBA, st. Paul ; secretary Nancy Wessel DeMars '60BA, Minneapolis; and Patricia McFadden Par­ tridge '43BS, Wayzata, Minn ., president of the Alumnae Club.

CLASS OF 1923 PLANS GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION FOR JUNE 7

A Golden Anniversary Reunion committee, headed by Class of 1923 members Charles Hoyt and Catharine Coffman Knudtson, is firming up the plans for a very special reunion celebration on Thurs­ day, June 7. The GOlden Anniversary day will begin with regis­ tration in Coffman Union on the University of Min­ nesota's Minneapolis campus, followed by a Golden Anniversary luncheon hosted by the Minnesota Alumni Association, a Bus Tour of the University campuses, Tea at University President Malcolm Moos and Mrs. Moos' home, and an evening ban­ quet at the Town & Country Club in St. Paul. Class member and international civil rights leader Roy Wilkins will be the evening banquet's featured speaker at which Florence Lehmann will serve as mistress of ceremonies. Watch for further news of the reunion and its per­ Mary Cox sonalities in future issues of The Alumni News.

DENTAL HYGIENE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION elects Ardis Tyndall Nelson its president

New Hope, Minn. resident Ardis Tyndall Nelson '47GDH was recently elected president of the Dental Hygiene Alumnae Association. A practicing dental hygienist with Drs. Nordby and Johnson in Robbinsdale, Minn ., Mrs. Nelson taught oral hygiene in the Minneapolis public schools before her mar­ riage. She has since worked in Willmar before moving to New Hope. Mrs. Nelson was active in a number of church and civic organizations while her children were growing up, and remains active in her church and with the District 281 School Master's Wives organization. She is an avid out­ doorswoman, traveling often with her family to a summer lake home in northern Minnesota to enjoy hunting and fishing. Ardis Nelson She is also an excellent golfer, having participated in the Northern Minnesota tournament circuit for a number of years, and is a member of the Minnesota Women's Golfing Association.

32 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH Other officers of the Dental Hygiene Alumnae group include vice president Linda A. Lally '70GDH and secretary-treasurer Leah I. Eyler '70GDH, both of St Paul. Board members include Mrs. Delores Alexander '48GDH, Hopkins, Minn.; Mrs. Miriam Olson '51GDH, St. Betty Danielson Paul, Mrs. Clio K. Griffin '39GDH, Richfield, Minn.; Mrs. PatriCia Anlbal '49GDH, Minneapolis; Mrs. Sharon Jaeger 55G DH , Minneapolis; and Karen E. Johnson '61GDH, Minneapolis. The Alumnae Association has sCheduled ItS Annual Meeting for Tuesday, October 16. Chairmen of the event are Karen Johnson and Sharon Jaeger. Board member Delores Alexander is handling the group's successful Project Toothbrush this year The Dental Hygiene Alumnae Association Will hold ItS next board meeting on Tuesday, March 14, In the Campus Club (Coffman MemOrial Union, University of Minnesota) at 7:30 pm.

SCH OOL OF SOCIAL WORK ALUMNI name Betty Danielson their president for 73-74

Betty Danielson '43BA '53MSW, a Family and Child COLLEGES OF AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY & Welfare Planning consultant with the Community Health and Welfare CounCil , Minneapolis since 1969, was recently HOME ECONOMICS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION named head of the School of Social Work Alumni Associa­ hold March 3 Annual Meeting in Bloomington, tion after having jOined ItS board of directors in 1972. Minn. A SI. Paul native who spent most of her childhood In northern India in the State of Assam (between Tibet, China The Colleges of Agriculture, Forestry & Home and Burma) with her miSSionary parents, Ms. Danielson Economics Alumni Association held its 15th Annual Meet­ was preViously a fellow (1944-45) and senior caseworker Ing on Saturday, March 3, at the Sheraton Motor Inn in (1 945-47) with the St. Paul Family Service; the executive Bloomington, Minn. A 5:30 p.m. SOCial hour preceded a director of the Big Sister Association, Minneapolis, 1947- 6:30 p.m. dinner. 69 ; and a special instructor in Social Work for Bethel Col­ Highlights of the evening's program Included the presen­ lege, 1953-59 and 1967-72. tation of Outstanding Achievement Awards to John R. Among numerous professional memberships, she has McGuire '39BSFor, chief of the U.S. Forest Service, served as a board member or officer for the National Washington, D.C.; Sara Blackwell '50PhD, professor of Association of Social Workers, the Minnesota Welfare community service education at the New York State Col­ Conference, the Minnesota Conference on Social Work lege of Human Ecology, Cornell University; and to ElVin EducatJOn and the American Scientific Affiliation. She was F. Frolik '48PhD, professor of agronomy and dean of the a delegate from Minnesota to the White House Conference College of Agriculture at the University of Nebras a. on children, on invitation from the President in 1970. The Annual Meeting program also included a speech Ms. Danielson paints as a hobby, and has sold 25 of by Dr. Ralph Nichols, Port Charlotte, Fla., retired chairman her oil paintings in the last few years. She also continues of the Rhetoric department; a short program of "Glimpses to travel extensively in the United States and Orient, as of Today's College Graduate Vocations", featuring recent well as in Europe for professional conferences and for graduates of the three colleges; and special recognition pleasures, and in the British Isles, India, Jordan, Israel of the reunion classes of 1948 and 1923. and Greece; and she has served as a tour leader for a OM reCipient John McGuire began his forest service world triP via Baptist World Alliance. employment in 1939 as ajunior field assistant in the central As an active member of the First Baptist Church of Min­ United States. Since then he has held increasingly respon­ neapolis she has served on a number of commissions sible positions, primarily concerned with forestry research. and on special assignments. After a number of years as a forest economist at the The Annual Meeting of the School of SOCial Work Alum­ Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, Upper Darby, ni Association has been scheduled for Wednesday, Oc­ Pa., he was named chief of the Station's Division of Forest tober 3, 1973, and will include a night at the Old Log Economics Research, and held a similar position at the Theatre for dinner and a play. Pacific Southwest Station in Berkeley, Calif. In 1962 he The School of Social Work recently moved from the was aSSigned to the Forest Service Headquarters in West Bank Social Services Tower back to the fourth floor Washington, D.C. as a staff assistant In research, then of Ford Hall - Its headquarters seven years ago. For nos­ spent four years as director of the Forest & Range Experi­ talgic reasons, Ms. Danielson is urging old grads to revisit ment Station in Berkeley, became the Forest Service's their " haunts" in order to see where a new lounge area deputy chief in charge of Program Planning and Legislation is being proposed for the School. from 1967-1971 , and was named associate chief of the Alumni are also asked to watch for announcements Service in 1971 before assuming his current position in about the special hearings that will be held to analyze 1972. new School of Social Work Director Alan Wade's mission A member of the Society of American Foresters, statement and educational policy for the School. McGuire has written or collaborated In the writing of a

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 33 Sara Blackwell John McGuire E. F. Frolik

number of scientific papers and contributed to the monu­ Dr. Frolik is well-known for his teaching of farmers during mental survey, "limber Resources for America's Future". difficult times - the drought and depression of the 1930's Professor Sara Blackwell, who was instrumental in the and the problems resulting from WWII. Heavily involved development and organization of the New York State Col­ in foreign service, he played a key role in establishing lege of Human Ecology at Cornell University, has been major university technical assistance programs abroad a member of the Cornell University faculty since 1948. and has recently returned from a two-month assignment She has served this Ithaca, N.Y. university as an assistant in Vietnam where he served as agricultural consultant to and associate professor in the New York State College the U.S. Agency for International Development. of Home Economics; and as a professor and department chairman of Home Economics and Community Service Education before assuming her present position. Previously, Miss Blackwell was a secondary school teacher in Pennsylvania, a research assistant at the University of Minnesota, and an educational consultant COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS for General Mills, Inc. Professor Blackwell has served on most of the standing '51 committees of both the College of Home Economicsl Shirley Dahl Abbott '51 BA received an MS In educatron from Old Human Ecology and of the Graduate Field of Education, Dominion University, Norfolk, Va ., in June. as well as on several University committees and boards. '52 Her professional memberships include the American James A. Kennedy '52BA, Alexandna, Va , is taking a ten-month graduate tevel course in national security at the Industnal College Association for the Advancement of Sciences (as a fellow) , of the Armed , Ft. Lesley J. McNair, Washington, D.C He the American Association for Higher Education, the Ameri­ is regularly employed in the Office of the Director of Army Budget, can Educational Research Association, the American Comptroller of the Army, in Washington, D.C. Home Economics Association (AHEA), the American '54 Vocational Association (AVA), the National Council on Army Reserve Lt. Col. Elmer M. Papke '54BA, Fairfax, Va , recenlly Measurement in Education, Omicron Nu and Phi Kappa completed the finat phase of the command and general staff officer Phi. course at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, FI. She has been most active in the AHEA and AVA, serving Leavenworth, Kan, He is employed by the U.S. Department of Agricul· ture in Washington, D.C. on the executive boards of both organizations, as a trustee Commander Linus B. Wensman '54BA, Wauwatosa, Wis., execu· of the AHEA Foundation, and is currently on the editorial tive officer of the Navy R.O.T.C. unit and associate professor of board of the Home Economics Research Journal, a new naval science at Marquette University, was awarded the Navy AHEA publication. Meritorious Service Medal for his service as executive officer of Naval Dean Elvin Frolik began his academic career in 1933 Station Subic Bay, Republic of the Philippines, from May-June 1972. as a county agricultural agent in southeastern Nebraska. '56 He later served as an extension agronomist and, in 1952, Gary W. Harm '56BA, Minneapolis, has been elected a vice presi­ was appointed chairman of the Department of Agronomy dent of Kerker & Associates, Inc. He had been with the advertising at the University of Nebraska. Three years later he was and public relations firm for 13 years and is now media director. promoted to associate director of the Agricultural Experi­ '62 Ronald E. Tvetene '62ALA has been appointed district manager ment Station and was named dean of the College of for GAF Corporation's Floor Products Division Construction Systems Agriculture in 1960. Unit. He will bee headquartered in Kansas City. During his career at the University of Nebraska, he has Dr. Neil R. Wylie '62BA, chairman of the Cornell College made notable contributions in research, teaching, public psychology department, recently participated in a National Science service, foreign service and administration. Foundation short course. During Cornell's Interim, a three-week term

34 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH Capt. Alvin S. Swanson '68BA, Minneapoli s, has received hiS sec­ ond award of the USAF Commendation Medal at Oakland Army Base, Cal. He is now chief of the USAF water port logistics office at Oakland. '69 Dr. Gerald Eager '69PhD, associate professor of art at Bucknell University, LeWisburg, Pa., has been granted a one semester leave to study the work of European painters that is related to the current "fantastic" painting In American art. Richard J. Kuykendall '69BA has been promoted to USAF staff sergeant. He IS a histonan at K. I. Sawyer AFB, Mich. John W. Schmidt '67PhD IS the chairman of the department of speech and dramatic arts at Central Michigan UniverSity. He had been an assistant professor of speech and director of forenSiCS at Washington State UniverSity before JOIning the CMU faculty In 1970. '70 Sec. Lt. Paul A. Anderson '70BA, Mora, Minn., has been awarded sil'lerwlngs upon graduation from USAF naVi gation training at Mather AFB, Cali f., and has been aSSigned to Pease AFB, N.H., as a navi ­ gator With the Strategic Air Command. Philli p R. Hagen '70BA, has been apPOinted special markets mana­ ger, educational products, southwestern region, by A. B. Dick Com­ pany. '71 USAF Sec. Lt. DaVi d B. Crumeron '71BA is now on duty at Hill AFB, Utah, as a helicopter pilot of the Military Airlift Command. Sec. Lt. Mark D. Cowan '71 BAhas been awarded silver wings upon graduation from USAF navigator training at Mather AFB, Cal. , and is aSSigned to Duluth International Airport, Minn., for flying duty between semesters, he will conduct 'Winter In the San Juan Moun­ tains," a special course designed to give an overall picture of animals With a unit of the Aerospace Defense Command. Sec. Lt. Henry H. Holt 71 BA, Bloomington, Minn., has been In a winter mountain environment. The class will be held at the Wylie's cabtn near Ouray, Colo. awarded his silver wings at Craig AFB, Ala., upon graduation from USAF pilot training and is assigned to Tyndall AFB, Fla., for duty '63 Capt. Larry J. Blocker '63BA, Minneapolis, a supply officer, is as an F-106 aircraft pi lot. on duty at Bien Hoa AB, Vietnam, as a member of the Air Force Sec. Lt. David J. Jirele 71 BA, Owatonna, Minn., has been awarded AdVIsory Team-6, Formerly he was with an Air Force support Unit silver wings upon graduallon from USAF navigator training at Mather AFB, Cal., and is aSSigned to McDill AFB, Fla., for fl ying duty with In Karamursel, Turkey. Malcolm S. Cohen '63BA has been appointed associate director a Unit of the Tactical Air Command. of research at the Inslltute of Labor and Industnal Relations of the Sec. Lt. Michael J. Meli ch '71 BA, Crystal, Minn., has been awarded UniverSity of Michigan and Wayne State UniverSity. Silver wings upon graduation from USAF navigator training at Mather Richard P. Hill '63BA, was promoted to Army Major recently AFB, Calif. , and is aSSigned to Luke AFB, Ariz., where he wi ll fly while serving With the 20th North American Air Defense Command with a Unit of the Tactical Ai r Command. '72 at Ft. Lee Air Station, Va. He is a reports officer. '65 Army pnvate Michael G. Petty '72BA, Mound, Minn., recently com­ Donald Wentworth '65BS '70MA, Crystal. Minn., has been pleted eight weeks of baSIC training at the U.S. Army Training Center, appointed assistant professor of economics at Pacific Lutheran , Ft. Knox, Ky. University John H. Schaper '72BA has been aSSigned to Edwards AFB, Cal., '67 after completing Air Force basic training. Ca pt. Charles W. Swanson '67BA, Fergus Falls, Minn., has Richard K. Schwartz '72BA, Inver Grove Heights, Minn., has been received the USAF Commendation Medal for meritorious service commissioned a second lieutenant In the USAF after graduation at Castle AFB, Calif. from Officer Training School at Lackland AFB, Tex., and is assigned Stephen Chodos '61 BA, San Diego, Cal. , has been promoted to to Craig AFB , Ala., for pilot training. senior associate at the Information Sciences Company of the Plan­ ning Research Corporation. He IS currently task manager for an automated message processing and distribution system to be Installed on the new super aircraft carner, the V.SS. NimItz. Sanford Margolis '61 BA has been appointed assistant professor of pianoforte at the Oberlin College Conservatiory of Music, Oberlin, SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Ohio. A former member of the Minnesota Orchestra, he preViously taught at Baylor University and at SI. John's University in Minnesota. '51 . USAF First Lt. Sandra L. Holmquist '67BA, an Intelligence officer, Dr. George R. Pettersen '46BA '51MD '52MS of Minnesota IS on duty at Korat Royal Thai AFB, Thailand. has returned with the S.S. Hope from a 10-month miSSion in Natal David L. Katzung '67BA, Minneapolis, has been promoted to retail Brazil. Dr. P~tersen served as staff physician on the voyage, which accounting coordinator for Super Valu Stores, Inc. He had been ~~U9ht medical treatment and training to the people of the Natal area. a senior programmer for the wholesale food distributor. Sharon J. Rogers '67MA, a PhD candidate at Washington State USAF Maj. Frederic M. Brown'64BS '6SMD '70MPH is presently U ~l versity , has been appointed lecturer in SOCiology and political stationed at Kunsan AB, Republic of Korea, as commander of the SCi ence at Alfred Uviversity, Alfred, N.Y. USAF Dispensary there. Previously he was stationed at the USAF '68 School of Aerospace Medicine at Brooks AFB, Te ., and the Office Capt. Gary J. Eifert '68BA, Wadena, Minn., has been awarded of the Command Surgeon for Headquarters. Aerospace Defense silver wings at Webb AFB, Tex., upon graduation With honors from Command, Ent AFB, Col. USAF pilot training. He received the Academic Achievement Award '71 lor attaining the highest grade average in the course and will be Janis Priedkalns '71 MD has been apPOinted a Visiting professor aSSigned to Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. of anatomy at the Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 35 '60 Alice L. Peterson '60BS, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, has joined Creswell, Munsell, Schubert & Zirbal AdvertiSing as a wnter/producer PreVi­ ouslya home economist with Amana Refrigeration, Inc., Ms. Peterson will write and produce a variety of advertising and promotion matenai for consumer and food clients '69 First Lt. Robert A. Wall '69BS, a weapons system officer, is on duty at Udorn Royal Thai AFB, Thailand, where he has been aSSigned to a unit of the PacifiC Air Forces. Joan Mane Munby '69BS has received a master's degree In occu. pational therapy from Western Michigan UniverSity.

DENTISTRY

'56 Dr. Arden G. Chnsten '56DDS, a dental surgeon at Zaragoza AFB, Spain, has been promoted to colonel In the U.S. Air Force '61 Maj. Ronald W Bailey '61 DDS has graduated from the USAF advanced dental staH officer course conducted by the Air Training Command at Sheppard AFB, Tex., and has been assigned to the medical center at Keesler AFB, Miss. '71 LAW Army dentists Patrick J. Ennen '71 DDS, Minneapolis, and James H. Barthel '71ODS, SI. Michael, Minn, recently played In the Fifth '48 Army team handball tournament at Ft. Riley, Kan , where their team finished in fourth place. Frank S. Farrell '48LLB, St. Paul, vice president and general coun­ sel of Burlington Northern Inc., recently graduated from the three­ month Advanced Management Program of the Harvard University Graduate School of Business Admlnistrahon. VETERINARY MEDICAL

'58 Lt. Col. William L. Anderson '58DVM, recently completed the reg­ NURSING ular course at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College Ft. Leavenworth, Kan. '34 '72 Margret E. Benson '34BS, Greenbelt, Md., chief of NIH's Clinical Capt. Joanne M Rick '72 DVM, Crystal, Mlnn , recently completed Center NOrsing Department's Allergy and Infectious Diseases Nurs­ a five-week army medical department officer baSIC course at the ing Service, was recently presented a Public Health Service Commen­ Medical Field Service School, Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft Sam dation Medal for her skill in managing a complex nursing service. Houston, Tex. She has been chief of the AID Nursing Service of the Clinic Center, which is the research hospital of the National Institutes of Health, since 1953. '45 Sibyl G. Norris '45GN '45BS 'MA, Syracuse, N.Y., has been EDUCATION named acting dean of the School of Nursing at Syracuse University. '53 She has been a professor in the School of Nursing since 1969. Robert John Jacob '53BS, Simi Valley, Calif., recently received his doctorate in education from Brigham Young UniverSity, Provo, Utah. '55 Philip Besonen '55BS, Minneapolis, recently received his doctorate in education from Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY & HOME EC Ma~orie Quimby '55BS has been appointed assistant professor of elementary education at Ball State University, Muncie, Ind. She '54 previously taught at Eastern Michigan University, the Virginia Com­ Dr. John Eddy '54BS, Evanston, III., associate professor of educa­ monwealth University, the University of Georgia and the UniverSity tion at Loyola University of Chicago, has co-authored Action And of Chicago Laboratory Schools. Careers In A New Age, a book which provides a philosophy of coun­ '64 seling for peace careers now available. Dr. Eddy is president of the In­ David J. Caucci '64BS has been appointed assistant professor ternational Association of Educators for World Peace, a member of of library science at Ball State University, Muncie, Ind. He was pr~ ­ the Peace Commission of American Personnel and Guidance viously associated with St. Cloud State College and the public school Association, and a federal auditor for the United States Department of systems in Duluth and Tyler, Minn. Health, Education and Welfare. '68 '57 Henry Eugene Karjala '68MA has been appOinted assistant profes­ Maj. Robert J. Krogseng '57BS, an F-4 fighter-bomber weapons sor of music education at Ball State University, Muncie, Ind. systems oHicer, is a member of the Alaskan Air Command's 21st '70 Composite Wing at Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, which has earned the Peggy Ann Vaughn '70BS recently received a master of arts degree USAF Outstanding Unit Award for exceptionally meritorious service. from Western Mi chigan University, Kalamazoo, Mich,

36 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH Northcott Gru Weiss Mach Pleterek Eschner

'71 Winifred H. Northcott '71 EDD, consultant for early childhood educa­ tion programs for the handicapped in the Minnesota Department of Education, has bee" named to the 12·member HEW National AdVI sory Committee on Education of the Deaf

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Keith Kiefer '36 Alan K. Ruvetson '36BS, SI. Paut, president of First Midwest Corp., ~as become president of the Minnesota Association of Commerce and Industry '47 '68 Dean B. Carlson '47BBA, Minneapolis, has recently been awarded Staff Sergeant Lynn A. Hemming '68BBA, a supply specialist, was the ProfeSSional Manager Citation by the Society for Advancement among USAF personnel who played " Dad for a Day" recently when of Management. over 300 Korean children Vlsrted Osan AB, Republic of Korea. '49 '69 Kenneth E Broln '49BBA, Robbinsdale, Minn., has been promoted Stuart B. Utgaard '69MBA, director of corporate growth, has been to Vi ce president and cashier olthe First National Bank of Mlnneapo6s. named a VIce preSIdent of Northstar Industries, Inc. '52 George E. Pieterek 'S2BBA, Wheaton, III. , has been elected presi­ de nt of Pipe une Service Company, an operaling unit of AMSTED Industries. With the AMSTED organization for 20 years, he has served as general manager of Pipe Line Service Since September 1971. JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION '53 Donald l. Eschner 'S3BBA, Pottersville, N.J., has been named '67 manager of advanced development for the products and systems Robert H. Kiefer '67BA, Wayzata, Minn., has been promoted to division of Lockheed ElectroniCs Company, Inc. VIce preSident, marketing communications, from second vice presI­ '54 dent, advertising and sales promotion, by Paul Burke and Associates DaVid D. Weiss 'S4BBA has been promoted to controller of the (PBA), subsidiary of Alexander & Alexander, Inc. Kiefer will supervise King Foods subsidiary of Intemational Mullifoods. He Will supervise scheduling and budget planning, design and production of direct all accounting functions and computer Involvement. mail media advertising and sales promotion efforts for cli ent­ '59 sponsored insurance programs. Delwyn E. Olson 'S9BBA, Anoka, Minn., has been named assistant controller, financial control, for Dayton Hudson Corporation. He has been audit manager for the accounting firm of Touche Ross & Co. '60 Bruce G. Nimmer '60BBA has been elected president of Shelter Corporation of America, Inc., Minneapolis. He formerly held the POSI­ GRADUATE SCHOOL ti ons of executive Vice preSident and treasurer in the company. '62 '50 PreViously a consumer research coordinator, Thomas J Mach Ian F. Keith 'SOMS 'S2PhD, Wheaton, III . has been named a VIce '62BBA, St LoUIS Park, Minn., has been promoted to assistant store president of Swift Edible 011 Company, a diviSion of SWift & Company development manager In the Minneapolis diVISion of Super Valu PreVIOUsly director of marketing In the refinery division, he will now Stores, Inc. be in charge of refinery, marketing and sales for SEACO. '64 '61 John R. Jensen '64BBA, Budd Lake, N.J., has been appOinted Leonid Jirgensons '61 MA, an aSSlstant professor of claSSIcal and COOrdinator, marketing information systems, in Eastman Kodak Com­ Romance languages, has been named as a recipient of the Distin­ pany's newly formed graphics markets divisil'm in the U.S. and Cana­ guished Teacher Award at Texas Tech Unlversrty, Lubboc , Te as dian Photographic division. The only Instructor in Latin in 1961 at Te as Tech, Jirgensons IS '67 credited with an Important role in developing the school's classics Larry Gru '67MBA has been named director of banking and foreign program. Standard Oil (Indiana) FoundatIOn, Inc. presents the $1 ,000 exchange for International Multifoods, Minneapolis. cash awards annually.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH 37 Erickson Shelton Nessly

'62 Soper Schultz Tung Hon Jeong '62PhD, Lake Forest (III.) College professor of physics and internationally known authority in laser beam photo­ graphy, has been selected a Fellow of the Optical Society of America. An innovator and pioneer in holography studies, he has lectured across the country, written numerous articles and produced two of architecture and city planning at the University of Pennsylvania educational films on holography. and chairman of its Urban Design program, has been named director '65 of the Kling/Planning division for planning and landscape architecture William J. Moody '65PhD, vice chairman of the Music department This is a new division of The Kling Partnership, Architects, Engineers at the University of Texas, Austin, has been named head of the & Planners, Philadelphia. A Fulbright Scholar to the United Kingdom, Music department at the University of South Carolina. He has been Day has been a consultant to various urban planning commlsSJons on the music faculty at Texas since 1966 and is the immediate past including the Twin Cities Metropolitan Planning Commission and Is president of the National Band Association. chairman for the American Institute of Planners Urban Design depart­ '66 ment. Michael A. Zoglio '66PhD has joined Merrell-National Laboratories Eugene C. Nessly '55BChemE, Minneapolis, has been elected division of Richardson-Merrell, Inc. as director of pharmaceutical vice president of marketing at the Minneapolis Gas Company. He research and development. has been with the firm since 1953. '68 '59 USAF Lt. Col. Louis Selig '68PhD has received the Department Richard l. Erickson '59BChemE, La Crescent, Minn., has been of Defense Joint Service Commendation Medal at the USAF Academy promoted to sales manager for the Consumer Products diVIsion of for his meritorious service as chief of the target evaluation branch The Trane Company. He has been with the firm since 1961 with the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. He is presently '60 assigned to the Air Force Academy as an associate professor of James H. Kullberg '60BME has been appointed senior project geography. consultant in Facilities Consulting services for Corning Glass Works. He had been manager of Corning packaging. '64 USAF Capt. James J. Sroga '64BS, Coon Rapids, Minn., has received the USAF Commendation Medal at Udorn Royal Thai AFB, INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Thailand, for meritorious service as an environmental liaison officer while assigned to the Operating Location E, 4th Weather Wing, Boul­ '40 der, Colo. He Is now a weather officer with the 10th Weather squadron Quentin F. Soper '40BS has been promoted to agricultural senior of the Air Weather Service. associate by Eli Lilly and Company. He had been head of agricultural '69 organic chemistry at the firm's Greenfield (Ind.) Laboratories since USAF Capt. Robert S. Nist '69BArch, Minneapolis, has received 1967. the Distinguished Flying Cross for aerial achievement In Southeast '51 Asia as a B-57 navigator. He is now stationed at Mather AFB, Calif., Army Reserve Lt. Col. Milton F. Lindgren '51 BS, Indianapolis, Ind., as a navigator bombadier instructor with a unit of the Air Training recently completed the final phase of the Command and General Command. Staff Officer course at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff '71 College, Ft. Leavenworth, Kan. Army Pfc. Roger C. Freeman '71 BChemE recently completed a' '54 eight-week field artillery operations and intelligence assistance Wayne Shelton '54BS, Potomac, Md., has been named a corporate course at the U.S. Army Field Artillery Training Center, Ft. Sill, Okla. vice president of Planning Research Corporation. Most recently he Sec. Lt. Daniel H. Schulz '71 BS, Winthrop, Minn., has been has been a senior vice president of PRC Information Sciences Com­ awarded silver wings upon graduation from USAF pilot training at pany, a computer systems and software firm of the corporation. Vance AFB, Okla. He also received the Officer Training Award for '55 flying and academic achievement and military bearing. He is assigned Norman D. Day '55BArch, Merion, Pa., an associate professor to Andrews AFB, Md.

38 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MARCH Right now, you can get $10,000 of GROUP life insurance for a lot less than you might think th roug h the ...

available exclusively to members

Once you're covered, cash benefits will be paid to the beneficiary of your choice for death from any cause at any time In any place

mnesota Alumni A SOClation Group life Insurance Big Benefit and Low Cost Application

AMOUNT OF LOW GROUP SEM I-ANNUAL YOUR AGE INSURANCE' PREMIUM UNDER 25 S10,OOO $ 11 .00 25 · 29 10,000 14.00 Last Name (Pront' Middle 100tiB 30 · 34 10,000 18.50

35 · 39 10,000 25.00 Street Address 40 · 44 10,000 36.00 45 · 49 10,000 51.00 City State ZIP Code 50 · 54 10,000 73.50 55 · 59 10,000 108.00 Date of Strth CII''', or years at U of M 60 and Over (Amounts of Insurance and premiums change after age 6 0 Wrote for details I BenefiCiary (Pront Name as Relationship • High' amounts of InSUfsnc MARY DOE, not MRS JOHN DOE) For Info,",at on wnt Mlnn o I rio Insurance Admlnl tr tOr

It' s eesy to enroll Statemen t o f H ealt h I Complete Group Life Insurance Applicallon 2 Mall to M innesota Alumni Assocl.lIo" The follo..",.ng Information IS submitted as eVidence Insurance Administrator of my Insurability ____ Helght ____ SUi te Five Hundred 400 So County Rd 18 M inneapolis M inna ota 55426 Have you ever been declined or rated for Itfe insur 3 Send no money now you will be nOllf,ed of the pproval ance? (If yes, give details below) ______of your application and will rece,,,e your first billing from Wlth,n the past five years, have you been confined th adm,nlstralor for more than five days for any Illness or Injury or undergone any surgical operatlons1 (I f yes, give details below) ______Are you In good health? ______

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I hereby applv for that coverage for which I 8m or may become eligible under the abov Group Poltcy is.ued by the Prudent I I I nsurance Company of America to the Minnesota Alumn. ASSOciation, ______x ______Data Signature Ptudenilal NO Only Sandy Beaches NO COLD Temps in 70's & 80's NO OVERCOA Shirtsleeves & Bathing suits

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editorial POINTS OF VIEW

I want to report to you about an amendment to the by-law of The Minnesota Alumni Association that has changed the procedure of electing members to the Board of Director .

The change is a simple one - five new Board members will be elected each year by the membership at the time of the Annual Meeting. rather than by ballot in the ALUMNI NEWS.

The new procedure is common practice among the nation ' a OClatton and organizations. It eliminates a competitive ballot. thus saving orne misunder· standings and hurt feelings; but, more importantly , it con erve the pool of experienced volunteers who are willing to erve and to give freely of their time and efforts ; (It is interesting to note that less than 2% of the membership ever voted through the ALUMNI NEWS ballot.)

The Minnesota Alumni Association is governed by a Board of 58 member - 20 being elected by the member hip , 5 each year for four-year terms. The e 25 are the Board members that are affected by the new by-law. hange.

The 18 presidents of our collegiate constituent alumni oelatlon erve as ex officio members of the Board while they are pre idents of their re pective groups.

Sixteen at-klrge directors representing the nine alumni regions outside the State of Minnesota also serve on the Board, thus a uring all alumni everywhere a voice in alumni matters.

The presidents of the Graduate " M " Club and the Law Alumni Association are ex officio members of the Minnesota Alumni Association.

The five new nominees to the Board are presented to you in thi issue of the ALUMNI NEWS. All are well qualified to be your representatives during the next four years, beginning July 1. 1973

2 ALUMNI NEWS. 1973 APRIL How tosuccee • mar. et ...

work at it!

Con Ider becoming a 1ernll Lyn h count E e utive. There are two kmds of individual who ucceed m the marl..et. Those who wi ely m\e t their dollars, and th e who wi ely ad'ise the m\e tors. \\e have been in trumental m helping to develop both. Perhap that I \\hy, after five years m ecunlle ale, our average account e'(ecutive ha con i tently been m the top :!% of all merican in term of inc me . and why v.e have con I tently been able to mamtam ur po ItlOn a the large~t, and one of the mo t diversified brokerage hou. e m the \"orld

u ce and performance are m eparable. genume mtere t m the securille field to But then you an't perform \\lthou( I..nowledge. help you get (here 1anagemenl material? That' wh v.e mSI t on one of the fine t and ou'\e got to be Ihat tlO. Becau e you're the most comprehen Ive trammg program in the I..md of per~\)n \I.e 10\)1.. for 10 fill our e. ecutive indu try, and why we set \u h high standard for po I . our applicant . ~h 51 Import.ln\' )\)U can't pr ra lin ate. F r starter, you have to be intelligent uc e II all for no one . nellher an \\e. nd nd if you've had any e penen e in ale, y u'd \\ h hould someone \Ilth your I..md of talent I..now th t ambiti n, elf-mollvation and a om­ ml~ out on our I..I!lU of opportunity. pellti e plrit are al. 0 important nd then. of ,end u ) ou r re. u me no\'. in com plete cour~e, you need the I..ind of energ to put It 311 onfiden e. and let\ ee if \Ie can't mal..e you a to good usc You've got to be c3ger to earn a 1(1[ ucce m the lOCI.. marl..et. \\ nle to \Ir Paul more m ney than you now arc, r h pc to tCln. terrill L) nch. o . :!OO ir t I allonal e3rn in ur pre~ent p\)sitl n and have a BanI.. Building, I. PJul, ~ltnn ...... 101.

~ MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER & SM ITH INC n qual pportunlt) mplo)er

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APR IL 3 OFFICIAL ALUMNI RING Selected by the Board of Directors of the Minnesota Alumni Association The Redesigned Minnesota Ring New As Today Traditional As Always

Women's Women's Miniature Dinner The Minnesota Side

This handsome 10K gold ring is set with a maroon synthetic garnet and decor­ ated on one side with the University Seal, the Golden Gopher, the Minnesota M and your graduation date. The other side allows you to chose your college Engi nee ring Business as well as your degree. Colleges avail­ able are: Liberal Arts Medicine Education Dentistry Music Law Agriculture Business Forestry Engineering Medical or Dental (DDS) Liberal Arts Options and Prices Men 's Ring , Open Back $53.50 Closed Back $60.00 Women 's Dinner Ring $45.00 Women 's Miniature $45.00 Name Engraved $ 2.50 Oval Bezel Cushion Bezel White Gold $ 5.00 Sunburst Stones $ 4.00 Diamond Top $30.00 ._ ------j Linde Star Sapphire, Men 's $60.00 ORDER FORM I I Women's $30.00 Send to: Minnesota Alumni Association, 2610 University Avenue, SI. Paul 55114 I 14K Gold, Men's $15.00 Check: Men's Ring , Open Bac ~ Closed Back_ . Women's Miniature -, Women's $ 8.00 I Women 's Dinner _. Oval Bezel , Cushion Bezel (Add $1.00) -' I Encrusting, 2 Greek Letters $ 3.00 I 3 Greek Letters $ 5.00 Extra White Gold _ ; Sunburst Stone _ ; Diamond Top _ : Linde Star I Charges: Sapphire : 14K Gold _ : Encrusted Letters ___. Block Letter $ 3.00 I Other Informa tion : College__ _ __ ; Degree ____ I Old English $ 3.00 Special Symbol $ 5.00 Year Graduated : Initials (3) ; Finger Size _ _ . Cushion Bezel $ 1.00 My check is enclosed for $ Membership # ______Nonmembers add $10.00

$10.00 deposit required when ordering. Nam e Minnesota residents only, add 4% sales tax. Address Because of gold price fluctuations, ring City ____ State ______. __ Zip ______prices subject to change without notice. l ______------THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE John E. Carroll '33BChemE . , •• ,... • •.. , ... Presldent Harry E, Atwood '31 BA •• ,' " ••• ,First Vice President George T. Pennock '34BBA •.. Second Vice President Barbara Stuhler 'S2MA ...... •. . Secretary alumni news Franklin 0 , Briese '28LLB .. ,. ., " ,.. ".Treasurer UNIVERSllY OF MINNESOTA Gerald H. Friedell '48BA SlJD .. . .Member Geri Mack Joseph '46BA .,., ••• " .. , ••• " ...Member Robert Hugh Monahan '43MD Member APRIL 1973 VOL. 72, NO.8 Carl N. Platou 'SlMHA '" •• Member Wallace E. Salovlch 'SOBBA '56MHA . ,.,., •. Member Thomas H Swain '42BBA . , .. , . ,. Member Oscar R Knutson 27LLB , • , ,. .• • •.. Past President EdWin L Halslet '31 BSEd '33MA '37EdD .•. , .. Ex. Director in this issue BOARD MEMBERS Both the Minnesota citizen and Termexp/rea1973: FredJ. Agnlch '37BA, Harry E, Atwood the student benefit from the lat­ 31BA, Gerald H. Friedell '48BA 'SlJD, Joseph Karesh ler's volunteer efforts that allow 29BA, Oscar R Knutson 27LLB, Miss Melva E. Lind the student to reconcile his class­ 24BA, George T. Pennock '34BBA, Carl N, Platou SlMHA, room instruction with a prac­ J A. Stromwall 'SOBA. titioner's life in the 'real world'. Term explr.. ,974: Franklin Bnese '28LLD, John E, Carroll See the cover article on University 33BChem E, Robert G, Cerny '32BArch, MIss Manlyn of Minnesota student volunteer­ Chelstrom 'SOBA, Lynn Hokenson '44, Harold Melin ism. There's also news of the MAA '44ChemEng, Robert Hugh Monahan '43MD, Henry N. Annual Meeting. other University Somsen, Jr '32BA, 34LLB, MIss Barbara Stuhler S2MA, student activities and University Milton I, Wick '18. information on the inside. Term explr.. 1975: George S, Arneson '49BEE, Charles Bntzlus '33BCE '38MSCE, George Gibbs '63BSEd, Leonard C, Heisey '49BSB, Gen Mack Joseph '468A, Kenneth P Manlck '56BA '60BS '60MD, Richard F. MesSing 43BChemE, Wallace E Salovich 'SOBBA '56MHA 2 Points of View Term explrea 1976: Margaret Fenske Amason '54BSHE, Terrance Hanold '33LLB, John K. Hass '33LLB, Jerry 6 The Student Volunteer: A Valuable Com- Helgeson 'S5BA, John I. Jacobson '54LLB, Stephen Keating 42lLB, Iantha Powrie LeVander '3SBSEd, Dr. Troy G. municator Who Challenges Today's RoI~ns '45MD, John G Schutz '35, Thomas H. Swain '42BBA Communities PRESIDENTS REPRESENTING CONSTITUENT GROUPS Patricia McFadden Partndge '4388, Minnesota Alumnae Club. 13 MAA Nominating Committee Names Nine M Julian Erlandson '43BS '47MS Colleges of Agriculture, New Board Members For 1973 Member- Forestry & Home Economics; Harold G. Haglund 'SOBBA, ship Election College of BUSiness Administration; Dr. Warren W. Hunt '61005, School of Dentistry; Donald A. Sonsalla 'SSBS '62MA, College of Education; Dr. George W. 16 Carni 73: Marking A 25th Anniversary With Janda '48MD, Medical Alumni Association; Patrick O'Halloran Its Colorful Scholarship Drive '60AMS, Mortuary Science, Onaiee Fanslow O'Hearn '46GN, School of Nursing; James J. Remes '56BSPhm, College of 20 Faculty Profile: Richard C. Jordan Pharmacy; Alfred E, "rance '49BA, College of Liberal Arts & University College; Norman C. Silver '42METE, Institute of Technology; Dr. John L Walch 'SSBA '63DVM, 21 University Loses Four Administrators, Veterinary Medical Alumni Association; Ms. Betty Danielson Including A Vice President and Dean 43BA 'S3MSW, School of Social Work; Anis Tyndall Nelson '47GDH, Dental Hygiene Alumnae Association; Richard 22 The University Hyllested '67M '68BS, General College; Mrs. Sandra J, Carter SSBS, Division of Medical Technology; Charles B. Holmes S8BA, School of Journalism & Mass Communication, 28 MAA Constituent News

PRESIDENTS, REPRESENTING NON-CONSTITUENT 32 Around & About GROUPS Greer E. Lockhart 'Sl BSL '53LLB, Law Alumni Association: Donald C. Benson 'SOSLA, "M" Club. 37 Deaths

PAST PRESIDENTS COMMITTEE Russell E. Backstrom '2SBME '27MSME, WilHam F. Braasch 'OOBS '03MO, Victor Christgau '248SAg. FrankMn 0, Gray ·2SBA. Waldo E. Hardell '26BSB. Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA. Harry Mary Lou Aurell '62BAJourn .. . .. , . .. . , .. .. " Editor Heltzer '33METE. Hibbert M. Hill '23BCE. Arthur A. Hustad EdWin L. Halslet '31BS '33MA '37EdD . .. , , Managing Editor '16BA. Oscar A. Knutson '27llB. Francis A. lund '31-'35, Verga I Buescher , , .. , ...... , , . . Cover and Consultant Artist Virgil J. p, lundquist '43MO. Joseph Maun '32BA '35lLB, Harvey Nelson '2285 '2SMD, Charles Judd Ringer '38-'41. Second class postage paid at St. Paul, Minnesota. and at additional Glenn E. Seidel '36ME. James A. Watson '42BA, Edwin A. Wilson mailing offices, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 '30BEE, Wells J. Wright '36BSl '36lLB. Edgar F, Zelle 'l3BA. Published monthly, from September through June, by the Min­ nesota Alumni Association, 2610 UniverSity Avenue, SI. Paul. Min­ HONORARY LIFE ASSOCIATION MEMBERS nesota SS114; telephone (612) 373-2466. Member of the Amencan Dr. J. L Morrill, President Emeritus of the Unvierslty; Alumni Council. William T. Middlebrook, Vice President Emeritus of the Annual Alumni Associalion membership of $10.00 Includes a sub­ University; Dr. 0 , Meredith Wilson; Gerald T, Mullin; William scription to The Alumni News. Special corporate and business sub­ L Nunn, William B. lockhart. scriptions available for $S.OO yearly. Volunteer Nancy Orenstein at the Hoikka House for mentally iII/ retarded persons in St. Paul.

The Student Volunteer: A Valuable Communicator Who Challenges Today's Communities

DIVERSITY Their involvement in volunteer W r~ tng with the nlver Iry, the characterize tudent volunteeri m activitie benefits the student , t o . campu~ YM and YW pon- at the University of Minne ota - Volunteer work often give them or several olunteer pr grams there i diver ity in the tuden who practical experience in their major empha~izlng either e treme of apply for volunteer po ition ,diver- or a related field . And, occa~i nally , change in ial c nditions or ~itua ­ ity in the kind of volunteer po i­ a Univer ity tudent will find a paid tion . ther program , lIke the tions they apply for and in the po ilion through hi volunteer Unlver ity Year for A TIO benefits both sides receive. effort . jointly p n red by the niver Ity. The volunteer program within " Volunteer work i a learning a c mmunity group and the federal and without the Univer ity structure proces ," lone said . For ome tu ­ government, al 0 make v lunteer recognize the valuable contribution dent thi proce s occur in the very option a ailable t tudents. tudents can make in the community formal en e when they are able to through their varied kills, talent arrange academic credit C r their and academ ic background . participation . For other, the per- .. Student have, be ide the kill onal growth i well worth their vol­ TH they pick up in college, their own unteer involvement. Volunteer rvi e ffice of the tu­ per onalitie , their own experience University tudent have several dent ti It Ie enter act a a to contribute to situations," aid campu sources to help them find referral ervice for a number of vol ­ Conrad lone of the Student volunteer position . The Student unteer program and entraJize~ Activitie Center. " They have a lot Activities enter perate a referral informati n ab ut volunteer oppor­ to offer." service for students interested in vol­ tunitie available to ludents . The unteer work with local community majority oflhe e pp rtunitiescome agencies, while the Living Learning fr m c mmunity ag n ie. , so a enter offer placement in a variety tudenl'. v lunteer w rk will uu­ of community service projects, uch ally take him r her ff campu a in a walk-in counseling cenler, for which academic credit can be arranged.

6 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL Volunteer Conme Johnson at the E. F. Waite NeIghborhood House, Mmneapolis.

B th onradJone, who, a om­ 1000 tudent came to talk with Diane Dreher noted that today' mu nlty mvolvement advi or, dlfect the e repre entative . tudent olunteer i mainly the olunteer ervlce Office, and The pe ifi reque ts from area intere ted in gi ing hi effort to DIane Dreher, who held hi po ition agencle that the olunteer ervi e day-care center , enior citizen , un til the begmning of February , ~ee Offi e recel e are put mto a mam ecology-em ironment work and the the office d a clearinghou e of file that I categorized by tntere l e tabli hment of program for tn fonn at I n for tudent intere ted areas for tudent u e. Diane Dreher young women with pecial need . tn volunteer w rk, but unaware of e tIm ate that there are almo t 100 nd they are able to find po ition e, 1~t1ng opportunttle . volunteer Job a atlable in Mm­ to fulfill the e tntere ts, M . Dreher weekly column publihed in neapoli and a couple of dozen in aid . tudent rarely come to the The M /II/lewlcl Daily by the office t Paul e ery day . olunteer Office eeking a very It q~ de rtptions of current and The agency reque ts. whl h call pecific area In \\ hI h volunteer ometlmes urgent reque t for vol­ for \ arled degree of e "penen e . work i una aliable. un teerer Ice~ Thi column ha kIll and time invo" ement. gener­ Roughly two-thlfd f the tu- included request ~ r aenior cittzen ally k for tudent a istan e m one den M . Dreher h talked \" ith mter lewer t phone and vi it of SI broad categorie : tutonng: are ophom re and junior : the elderly per ns who may be eligible one-to-one, big-brother/big- iter remaining one-thlfd are fre hman, Fu r the ~ d tamp program, for a type of relatIon hIp : group work; eni r ,graduate tudents or non­ mediator to help prevent interrup­ dr p-in center; \"ork \\ Ith the ill. tudent . The College of LIberal lIOn f famil night program at a elderly or handi apped: and publi Ar and the College of Education central Mmneapolt neighborh od intere t or cial a tlon group . have the greate t number f tudent ce nter, and for an aide to help Within the e ategofle the volunteer . teacher in the daily r utine fa olunteer Office ha re eived Frequently Lo er Din ion CL Minneap Ii pre- ho I. pecific reque t for volunteen. t advi r ' v ill ugge t vo!unteen\' rk J nes estim, te that ea h" eek 10 tea h children gymna tic kill, to to tudent uncertatn of a maJor. "If '0 I pr pe tl e luntcer i It hI give co king tn tructi n, to each ou're not ure \\ hat your maj r uffice be au e oftheDlIily ad whIle p rt learns, to , erve a mu eum h uld be - volunteer \\ rk I a many m re inquirie come b gUIde , to an \\ er phone for outh go d wa to find ut, " Diane phone . ervlce, t d cleri al Dreher aid . n annual luntecr Recruit- i\ il Libertie' nl n onrad Jone agreed, adding that ment Day earl each fall quarter als and t act a an rabic intepreter. through voluntee; work in a~ pro­ acquaint niversity tudent \ tth pe ti e major, a tudent may real­ volunteer opp rtunitie in a ize that he i in the wr ng fi Id and carnival-like atm phere . Rep- h uld hange hi ~aJor, r resentati e fr m m re than 70 tin­ trengthen hi ch I e of a career. neap 11:-. and t. Paul communil agencie came t ffman thIs pa t fall to man booth t student about their pr gram '.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 7 a si tance to individual tudent . He nce LL ha a cepted a pro­ al 0 hope to involve mor min rity po al for a L po ition, the In­ tudent in volunteer work that dividual ubmitting the pr po al they too can benefit from the experi­ be me resp nsible for provldmg ence. tudent with field e perience ana for e tabll hing eminar where the e tudent can di cuss their e peri en e . Ron Hick responded to an LLC As A UNIT adverti ement la t pring for a of Univer ity o liege , the Livmg ervice-Iearnmg coordinator. A an Learning enter (LL ) has a dual urban tudie maJor , Ron had done purpo e: to provided Univer ity tu ­ field work in Model itie lfl St dent with pporlunitie to partici­ Paul and had contact with agencle pate in ocial action program and involved in urban renewal, uch as · Searching for a major, however, to as i t tudents in arranging IS not the only rea on tudent the Hou ing Authority and project academic credit for participation in area committee . Student 10 tfJe become volunteer worker. " By and tho e program . Not only doe LL urban renewal tudie program large, they (student) are ju t pon or pecific project each quar­ interested in helping people ," Jone de igned by Ron examine the prob­ ter that tudent can enroll in but said of the tudents he ha talked lem and i ue , nationally and loc­ it al 0 maintain a Ii t of ally, of urban renewal through their with . They have free time and are comm~nity agencie ,group and individuals seeking new experience - " to field work, re earch and a weekly that need tudent a i tance . work with, to communicate with eminar. Thi Ii t can include tutor for a In addition to the urban renewal people ." migrant tutorial program, leaders for program, other LL program Student may al 0 become vol­ caravan camping, an art and crafts unteer workers to gain practical include field work In leg I lallve leader, or a community program experience in their field, while action, women' tudle5., health a istant for the Minne ota ecurity care, day care, altematl e edu d­ others take advantage of the field Hospital at St. Peter. These po i­ tion , intercultural communlcallon . work available to fulfil degree tion do not include the eminar education res urces and MIOne ota requ irement for certain major , and di cus ion groups the LL - hi tory . Between 15 and 20 . tudent such a elementary education and spon ored project do . participate 10 each proJe t per quar­ ocial work. Some student want to La t year the Univer ity enter ter. be able to list volunteer activitie acted a a clearinghou e for infor­ While the field w rk benefit\ the on their job re urnes . mation concerning 120 project individual tudent, the dl U\ ion While agencie are generally very pon ored by community group esion whIch run concurrently sati fied with tudent volunteer - and organization , a well as with the field work llow all tuden~ "agencie laud and applaud tu­ as isted tudents in obtaining credit in a particular program to benefit dent ," Diane Dreher aid - stu­ for their work. Thi year LL has from each other' e penen e. LC dent feedback is harder to obtain . four central taff member and nine member and project leader tella Other than the replies to follow-up ervice-Iearning corp (SL ) mem­ Alvo ha pIa ed her project mem­ inquirie ent out by the Volunteer ber to coordiante LL program bers in different type of day care Service Office to student referred that have been filling important organizatlOn ; the eminar they to agencies, the office receive little community need while correlating attend promote an awarene of the information from student. What the practical knowledge tudent diffcrent form of day care enc un ­ comment it doe get the office u e gain from the project to the theoret­ tered by all member of the day care to improve it operation and send ical knowledge they acquire in the project. to the pecific agencie involved . classroom . The Living Learning enter not Continued tudent use of the only a i ts tudents in uch pro­ Volunteer Services Office, how­ gram but al 0 tho e individually ever, te tifies to its ability to an wer invol ed with community agencIes tudent need . to arrange Univer ity credIt ~ r their The office ha served a a referral work if they wi h it. redit IS service for individual tudent for negot i ated i ndi vidually with the la t four years; previou Iy, the Univer ity fa ulty intere ted in the Student Activities Center only area the student i w rking in . 'su­ assi ted tudent organizations that ally this credit is granted under inde­ were involved with group volunteer pendent tudy r directed tudles project. mechani m ' within particular Jones hopes to involve tudent Univer ity department . organizations once again, while maintaining hi office's referral

8 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL Dick Mil/es was able to use the different teaching methods and Now, the Motley students like the teaching theories and princIples attitudes. Working in the Motley opportUnity to choose their activltJes . taught In hIs educatJon courses at program, which was suggested to Trying to follow their interests as the UniversIty immediately In his vol­ hIm by DIane Dreher at the Student much as possible, Dick concen­ unteer work. "/'m learning a lot of ActIvIties Center, has given hIm the trates on teaching the children new things at school," he said, and, opportunity to expertment WIth vart­ Spanish phrases and vocabulary, as a volunteer Spanish teacher at ous techniques and to gauge their rather than grammar, while Motley Elementary School, "I can try success from the reactions of the acquainting them WIth a culture dif­ them out." students ferent from their own. A Junior In secondary educatton When he began the weekly Span­ " They're really fun kIds to work hoping to teach Spanish, Dick ish sessIOns last fall, Dick did not with ," he commented. 'They've spends an hour a week teaching want to teach just another class for gIven me something to build on " Spanish in Motley's Extended Day the students so he asked the stu­ Dick acquired experience in Program, whIch offers various dents what they would like to do . teaching and In Spanish while In the activitIes afterschool hours for The Motley pupils were not accus­ Army. BeSides three years of high elementary students . tomed to determining their own school Spanish , he had a six-month He joined the program because school acttvitJes, they remained sil­ language course after entering the he wanted expertence wIth children ent for a while Then one asked if service. Later he was stationed in in their formative years and because they could learn thelf nal"1es In Panama where he taught mechanics he was worried about his goals as Spanish; and they spent their first in Spanish in a service school. a teacher. Earlier, whIle a classroom meeting doing just that. Because of the GI BIll, he said , volunteer at Mechanic Arts In St. he has the tIme to do volunteer work. Paul, he had contact WIth older stu­ "I think a lotof college students don't dents and had been confronted WIth have the time," he saId.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 9 Pictured in these photos, from left to right are.'

Volunteers with Project Motivation . Volunteer Steve Sandberg at the Youth Emergency Service, Inc. (Y.E.S.), Minneapolis . A volunteer with Project Motivation .

ANEW, federally-funded volunteer program will enable orne Univer ity of Min­ ne ota student with architecture and/or de ign background to apply their knowledge to anti-poverty pro­ jects while earning academic credit. Through an alliance of the federal Beginning spring quarter, 10 to government, universitie, tudent 12 University tudent recruited and low-income people, the Univer­ from the School of Architecture, the ity Year for ACTION (UY A) College of Home Economic and seek to a si t univer itie in provid­ the urban tudie program, will ing experience-ba ed learning for begin work on project ugge ted by tudent while applying academic the Community Design enter, re ource to the problem of the which erve the Model itie area poor. ACTION, the federal agency ofMinneapoli . Funded by the Bu h co-ordinating dome tic and foreign foundation and donation from volunteer progranls, spon~or UYA private architect and taffed by tu­ and provides technical a si tance, dents and volunteers, the ommun­ overall direction and funding for the ity De ign enter provides free local UY A program . design ervice to Minnesota resi- Univer itie grant academic cre­ dent ranging from graphi I am glad thor I was picked 10 dit to the tudent participating in a si tance in de igning brochure to hm'e Jim . It was fun to go to 1m UY A, a well as provide acce s redesigning buildings. house alld play football. We pia\' to appropriate re ources and faculty Each tudent working at the om­ . 'Trouble" together. I ate at IllS upervi ion . The student, who are munity De ign enter will e tabli h hOIl e. required to live and work for a full hi own credit arrangement with his We call each other on the tele­ year in the community, are particular collegiate unit and will be phone. Mo tly I call him lip . employed full-time on project upervised by a Univer ity faculty A nd pretty 0011, we're goil18 to which are determined by local member and by a enter representa­ the Shrine ircu . organizations. Requests from the tive. Living expense will be pro­ I think Jim i a guy, a/ld community guide the project selec­ vided for each volunteer in addition I'd like to be like him when I grOll' tion. to a mall tipend . up, (signed) TOllY Since the ommunity De ign enter's volunteer taff include profes ional ar hitects and de ign­ T NY NO JIM er, UY A participati n for Min­ met thr ugh Proje t M tivatlon. a ne ota tudents, Lane DeMoll, YM A-YW volunteer program as i tantdirectorforthe enter said, whi h pair ni er ity tudents on

10 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL Howard BeU of the Univer- ity YMCA would like to hear from Minne ota alumni who participated in Y program while at the University. Contact him at the Univer ity YMCA, 1425 Uni er ity A e., .E., Min­ neapolis, Minnesota, 55414. Phone: 331-1013.

Members 55 to 87 Project Act. which operate in a MAA Senior imilar fashion to Project Motiva­ tion, place niver it} tudents in Life Program one-to-one relation hip with educatable, retarded tudent No physical required. between 5 and 16 year of age at a one-to-one b i with grade chool * Emerson Elementary chool in Min­ children who are f mg ome type * Immediate accidental neapoli . After in initial orientation of IIvmg cri I . The olunteer and death benefits. e ion, the volunteer mee with hi his child - a young ter ~ele ted by * Does not require evi­ tudent weeki and they both attend hi tea her and a lal worker for dence of Insurability. partie for Project Act members . the program - pend three to five In any of the Y' one-to-one pro­ hour with ea h ther ea h week . gram it i diffi ult to as e who They al 0 attend pecial activttie For more Information s benefit more - the niver ity tu­ together, like the hrine Cir us or Wnteto: dent or hi young charge: MAA Insurance Administrator Chtrtma partIe, arranged by the ... George is a ~·ery. very nice P.O. Box 907 Y for all the Pr je t Moti ation par­ Mpls., Minnesota 55440 big brother. I like Geor e too. He lIC ipan ts. is so nice. He should have a nice The olde t and large t of the three MAA # ______valentine day . .. Tommy. vo lunteer progr m, p n ored by nd Tommy' tea her com- the Y, Project M tivation involve Name mented: Tommy has thorou hly 150 ni er ity student each year. Address ______enjoyed having hi Big Brother. In addlti n t 20 to 40 tudent "ho Geor e makes a point of seein Joined in previ us year . Forty tu ­ City Tommy on a regular basis. The) do dent, belong to the - ponored State ______Z'p__ mallY thing together. Bet of all. Proje t ct and 26 to the Metro they really hm'e del'eloped afrieruJ­ Executi e lnt m hip program . ship and tru t. Tommy seem more The 26 tudent~ In the Metr Minne ota Pollution Control rela.red and secure sin e he emered E ecutl e Intern hip program gen ,the 1 illneapoli Tribulle. the pro ram. He p aks of hi Big ob,erve, from middle and upper orthwe tern Bell. Pill bur. Brother with admiration. re pect level management Ie el in large Piper-Jaffra or helter Corp ra­ alld affection. corp ration and go emmental and ti n. The pr gram in olve tudent educational organ i zat ion, the The ele tion and reening f for an extended peri d f time. u u­ deciion-making pr e e of the e appli ant is d ne in the fall b the all an entire a ademi year. and group.. on entrating n de i i n ; th e v lunteer ele ted attend emph ize per onal de\el pment of related to en ironmental and clal a preparat ry eminar inter quarter the volunteer a ell a the hange problem and their influence on the before joining a corp ration or they effe t. olunteer in e h of community. thev lunteer pend 10 agen full time pring quarter. the proje t meet on a regular b i weeks with u h firms a orthem Independent tud arrangement with ea h ther and \\ ith tudent­ tate Power, "ith niver ity fa ulty gi e the tu­ aide 0 rd inating pr je t· to di - Da ton-Hud on, dent \ luntee a ad mi redit for u problem the may ha\ e and lion. thetr work . Their give po ible olution. t the ame ttme ith h t ie\ si n .

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 11 the students also consider how their involvement in particular projects affects their life styles and values . "There's a lot of personal growth," Kevin Massey of the Y staff said. "It's really exciting ." The Y limits the size of each pro­ ject to insure interaction with other volunteers and with experienced staff members . The direction for all the Y program is provided by eight paid staff members; each of the programs, including the volunteer programs, are headed and coor­ dinated, on a volunteer basis, by stu­ dent aides who have participated previously in the program. Participation in Y programs al 0 gives University students a chance to meet other University tudents, which is a "real plus" said a Y staff member. A group feeling of com­ munity develops in the seminars, retreats and monthly meetings. Staff members at the Y have noticed a changing mood on campus towards volunteer work. This year they recruited aggressively for their volunteer programs; previou ly stu­ dent interest had been high enough to fill all their activities . However, Her participation in a volunteer tutoring program has removed Ann Y programs that have immediate Marineto's last doubts about becoming an education major. " It's impact, like their environmental increased my enthusiasm," she said. Ann now hopes to be accepted into the College of Education next fall . program, which concludes with a A sophomore at the University of Minnesota, Ann has always liked mountain backpacking trip , have kids, but before making a final decision to enter education she wanted continued to be very popular. to get into the classroom . Her academic advisor suggested she contact Others close to student volunteer­ Diane Dreher, then volunteer services advisor, to investigate volunteer ism have also detected changes in opportunities in the classroom. the student volunteers . Conrad During her meeting with Diane, Ann learned of the Women in Service Jones of the Volunteer Service to Education (WISE) volunteer tutoring program which places volunteer Office feels the" stigm a of expertise tutors in Minneapolis public schools to give individual attention to children - the 'I'm going to help you' who are behind academically and have had little success in school. attitude - has shifted to 'I'm WISE sponsors an orientation meeting every quarter on the University campus to acquaint prospective volunteers with its program and prob­ interested in you'" among student lems they may face as tutors . Students also receive information at this volunteers. Students are more time about the resources available to them, such as educational games sophisticated about volunteer work, to use in tutoring sessions, guidebooks for teaching arithmetic and read­ believe Julie Traun of the Living ing, and booklists for tutors . Learning Center and Diane Dreher, Two afternoons a week after her University classes and before going and are, consequently, able to focus to her part-time job, Ann tutors and helps with a class of 25 fourth their attention on activities specific­ and fifth graders at Bryn Mawr Elementary School. ally suited to them. "I'm almost a student teacher," she said, even though she has had Regardless of the emphasis of stu­ no actual classes yet at the University in education. She feels she "learns a lot from being around a teacher" and from the guides and suggestions dent vo lunteerism and the reasons provided by WISE. for it, University students continue "It's been a wonderful experience," she said. "I really love doing it." to make significant contributions to their immediate community and the world. "The th j ngs they are doing," Jones said of student volun­ teers, ., are creative, interesting and challenging ."

12 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL MAA Nominating Committee Names Nine New Board Members For 1973 Membership Election

REPORT OF NOMINATING COMMITTEE

Thi i to certify that the Nominat­ ing Committee met}anuary 9,1973 for purpo e of selecting five nominees to the Board of Director of the Minne ota Alumni A ocia­ tion. The new by-law amendment provides that report of the Nominating Committee will be made at the time of the Annual Meeting of the Membership on June 5. Tho e elected will erve term expiring in 1977.

The names and biographical kelche of each nominee selected are listed below for information of M. Elizabeth Craig Mrs. Betty Kane the member hip.

Re pectJully ubmitted, raig. 22. a niversity of Min- mi ion' final report of February. ne ota graduate who wa a Bronze 1973, and IS now a Commi ion lob­ John Carroll '33BCHemE, medal wmner in three meter diVing byi t. leader in the tate League Chairman at the 20th Olympiad m Munich. of Women oters and w inner of the Harry E. Atwood '3IBA Gennan • and now a dh ing coach League' Hope Wa hbum ward William }. Cooper '4IBBA at the niversity; and her daughter. for di tingui hed ervi e, he erved David R. Fesler 'SOBBA Llbb • a ni\er It ophomore a DFL tate Chairn oman from Harry Heltzer '33METE majoring m AmerIcan tudies . 1963 to 196 . a a governor' o car R. Knut on '27LLB Dr. raig h erved on the Min· appointee on a number of tate om· George Pennock '34BBA ne ota lumnae Club' board of mi ion, and a 1972 c -chairman dire t r during the p t three year . of itizen for Mondate . Mr . Kane' t\\0 mamed hildren are both graduate f the Olven-Ity . BETTY KANE Bet! Kane (Mr tanle D .) cia­ '30B '31M • G Iden aile}. RICHARD H. KYLE ~ r four- Mmn ., i a free·lan e medi al writer RichardH. Kyle·59B '62LLB, year tenn mclude: wh re entlyauthoredLookin For· White Bear Lake. Mmn .. \ rked \l'ard to a Car er 11/ Dentistr". In a a law lerk from 196_ -63 \\ ith addition to editorial dutie at the The Honorable Edward J . D Vln, DR. M. ELIZABETH CRAIG niver Ity f MIOne ta Pre and .. Di triet Judge, be~ re joinmg Nati e Minne tan M . Elizabeth Modern ;fedi ine Publi ations. ' he the t. Paul Law finn of Brigg and Craig '43B '45MB ·46MD. wife ha taught Engli h at the Mari. ~ r­ Morgan . He ha remamed \\ith thi of Howard W . Linc In. pe ialize bundet Girl hool and ni ersit) finn, e ept for an ab en e m I 6 - In diea e of hildren . he ha been f penhagen. Denmark, and at 70 \\ hen he en'ed a 1inne ota in pn ale pra IIC in pediatric in ni er ity of Minnes ta o Ii it r General. t. Loui Park. Minn n aeli e polilical olunte r, K} Ie i a tive profe 194 . Mr . Kane i' pre entl a member a dire tor f th La\\ IU01Dl ording I Dr. Craig. her of the Minnesota n titutional iati n of the niver it f claim to fame i!. her tv hildren : tudy ommi i n, \\ rot th 01- Minn , ota, fr m 1970-73: a a

ALUMNI NEWS. 1973 APRIL 13 Richard H. Kyle, Jr. Alan K. Ruvelson Robert Sheran member of the Minne ota Bar He aJ 0 serves as a member of Board of Law Examiner from 1958 Association's board of governors, the Minnesota Advisory committee to 1963 , and as a member of the from 1971-72; and as president of on Economic Development, as a Minnesota Board Of Tax Appeals the bar association's Young director of the St. Paul Chamber of from 1961 -62. Lawyers section, from 1970-71 . Commerce, and as a vice pre ident A magna cum laude graduate of of the Lay Advisory board of St. the University's Law School, Kyle Mary's Hospital, Minneapolis. OUR new at-large regional di­ was president of theM innesota Law F rectors have al 0 been nominated Review from 1961-62 and is a to serve on the Minne ota Alumni member of the Order of the Coif A ociation' board of director for and Phi Delta Phi Fraternity. ROBERT J. SHERAN He and hi s wife, Jane Helen Robert J . Sheran '39LLB, St. four-year term that expire June 30, Foley, have five children. Paul practiced law in southern Min­ 1977 . The e indi idual and their nesota from 1939 until early 1963, region are : except for a three-year period when ALAN K. RUVELSON he served as a Special Agent for JOSEPH L. FLAIG The president and director of Fir t the Federal Bureau ofInvestigation. Midwest Corporation since J 959, In January 8, 1963, Sheran wa (Region VIII) Alan K . Ruvelson '36BBA, Min­ appointed an associate justice of the Joseph L. Flaig '40BA. a Los neapolis, was recently elected the Minnesota Supreme Court, was Angeles attorney and well-known director and president of the Min­ elected in 1964 for a six-year lerm, civic leader on the We t Coast, has nesota Association of Commerce and re igned in mid-1970 to jo in the been an active member of the Min­ and Industry . One who helped found Minneapolis law firm of Lindquist ne ota Alumni A ociation's Los the nation 's first operating small & Vennum. Angele chapter for a number of business investment company, he This past month Sheran was years. previously spent 25 years in the appointed Chief Ju stice of the Min­ wholesale jewelry bu siness. ne ota Supreme Court to fi II out the Ruvelson is active in a number term of The Honorable Oscar Knut­ HAROLD ROSENZWEIG of important community spheres, son who resigned . (Region IV) including ecumenism, education Sheran, who is an elected member Harold Ro enzweig '42BBA , and politics. Currently the director of a number of professional as ocia­ Chicago, in 1955 wa one of the of six Minnesota and one Michigan tions, is currently serving as a founder and became the e ecutive corporation, Ruvelson is a pa t pre - member of the Minnesota State vice president, secretary-trea urer ident of the National Association of Board of Law Examiners, as chair­ and a director of North Advertising. Small Business Investment Com­ man of the Governor's Crime Com­ Inc., a nation al adverti ing agency panies, a director of the American mission and as a member of the headquartered in Chicago. When Arbitration Association, vice chair­ board of IT us tees of St. Thomas Col­ North Advertising sold its bu ine s man of the Twin Cities Adv.isory lege. in 1971 , he remained in the com­ Council, and on the panel of arbiters A State Representative from Blue munications field as president and for the American Arbitration Earth County for four years, Sheran a director of Allcorn , lnc., n c m­ Association. previously served the Minnesota pany which designs and in. tall. tele-

14 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL Harold Rosensweig Margot Auerbacher Siegel Sidney J. Wolfenson phone, ound and background mu ic Look Forward To A Career: Fash­ dam , powerhou e , chemical . y tern . ion, publi hed in 1971. plants and refinerie . PrevlOu Iy, Ro enzeig had She I a former public relation He is the national apprentice hip worked with the P firm of Ira director for Walker Art Center and chairman of the A ociated Inde­ Rubel& ompanya apartner,with was a fashion editor on Women's pendent Electrical Contractor of the Toni Company as budget direc­ Wear Dai( in ew York. Mr . America, which i tarting a nation­ tor and brand promotion manager, eigel al 0 was an over e writer wide training program for electrical and as a enlor accountant for H . L. for FaIrchild PublIcation, parent apprentice . Itman of Minneapoli . firm of Women's Wear DaiLy, and Wolfeo on, a registered profe - Ro enzweig, who i pre ently the ha held a number of other e ecutive ional engineer and a master electri­ pre tdent and director of the MA po Itlon In ew York publIc rela­ cian, i a member of numerou other Greater Chicago chapter, is a CPA tion and journali m. electrical and ci ic organization , m the tate of IIlmot , a member A member of the Overseas Pre among the latter the Kiwani . of the llIinoi and American Club, the Mione ota Pre Club and He and hi wife have two daugh­ A 0 iation of PA, a former currently a board member of the ter and a on. member of the board of governor Uni er ity of Minne ota Alumnae and pa t ecretary-treasurer of the Club, he i a former director of The e new board members, as Chicago ouncil of the American the St. Paul-Minneapoli Fa hion well as the new officer and execu­ OClatlon of Ad erti ing Group and has at on a number of tive comm Utee members oj the M in­ Agencie , and a former director of volunteer board , including the nesota Alumni A ociation will be Cypre ommunicati n orpora- Center Opera and ariety lub. introduced at the Association tion. director of variou other Mr. eigel 1 the wife of Harold 24th Annual Honor Pre entation companie , he al 0 serv the iegeI, a Minneapoli attorney, and and 69th Meeting oj the Member­ United Parkin on Foundation and the mother of two children. ship at the Radisson outh Hotel the Harvard Graduate chool of on June 5 1973. Bu ine lumni OClalton. Reservations Jor the Annual The Ro enz eig have four chil­ SIDNEY J. WOLFENSON Honors Pre entation & Meeting, at dren; and Bet ey Pi tner Ro en­ (Region V) $6.50 per per on. are available zweig received a B degree from Minneapoli native idney J . from the Minnesota Alumni Minne ota in 1950. Wolfen on '40BEE, Hou ton, As ociation, Univer ity of Min­ Te a . i pre ident of Wolfen on ne ota, 2610 Unil'er ity Avenue, Electri , In . T ..... i e pa t pre ident St. Paul 55114, telephone (612) of the M Hou t n area alumni 373-2466. MARGOT AUERBACHER chaptt:r, he moved to H u ton in A reception in the Gardm Court SIEGEL (Metro Area) I 43 t upervi e the building of of the Radis on outh at 5:30 p.m. Margot uerbacher iegel Na hip after two ear with the wil/precedea 7.'00 p.m. dinner and '44B Journ, Minn p Ii , is the T . . . in labama. program. co-ownerofher wn public relati n t the 10 e of World War n, Watch for the 1973 fay Alumni firm, HE ( iegel-H gan Enter­ Wolfen n did de ign and con tru - New with more information on the pri es) in Minneapoli ,a \ ell a lion work. In 1959 he organized hi Honor Pre entation & Annual a free- Ian e writer and auth r of own ompan hieh pe ializ in Meeting.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 15 W HEN THAT FIRST Then a econd hom will sound: ampu am ivai i two night hom blows at 7 :00 p .m . on Friday, the mu ic end in mid-note, the girl when inhibition are forgotten, age April 13, the curtains will ri e on di appear. apparently into thin air, barrier di appear. It i a time ~ T Carni '73, marking the 25th the Fieldhou e aisle clear and mul­ young and old, for tudent and anniver ary of Campus Camival at titude of people crowd into the tent alumni, for anyone and e eryone the University of Minne ota. to watch the how . intere ted in eeing a mini-Mardi For alumni, Cami i one of the The tage from which the band Gra. few traditional event till on the and the dancer perform are backed Why? campu , one of the last ve tige of by rna ive tructures of woden Why would hundreds of college more carefree, light-hearted col­ caffolding covered with cardboard tudenl who work, tudy, go to legiate life. and plywood heet painted and classe and have other comrnllt­ Even so, the out ide of the decorated. moving and lighted - menl pend Ihou and of hour and University Fieldhouse which ha all de igned to produce an individual dollar to produce ami? held 0 many cam ivai , till look and integrated theme that heighten [f il were only for the fun. arm the same a it always ha : bleak. the camival almO phere while hid­ would never have reached it 25th warehousey, functional, incredibly ing the tent in which the h w are year. If it were n Iy for the sale unattractive. But during Cami, the performed. of tradition, ami would have met inside of the Fieldhou e i a bright, Written, ca I, directed and per­ the ame fale as Homecommg. noi y. colorful jumble of humanity formed by Univer ity student~, each ami i fun and It I tradition. and humor, talent and excitement of the tent how i amazingly well­ but it i more - it is a fund-ral mg that i indeed camival! done, from the acting to the phi­ perati n wilh all profi d nated to When that fir t horn blow at ticated u e of lighting and ound Univer ity holar hip . 7:00, 15 different band will trike equipment. The kit al the heart Fa ed with cut-ba k 10 govern­ up 15 different tune and 15 differ­ of the tent how are generally two ment fund and ther probable ent dance line will bump and grind or three act comedie that have been decrea e in aid, the ni er Ity tu­ and lide out to wink at cheering rehear ed and perfected sin e mid­ dent need all the finan ial help they aud ience from 15 different ten­ February . They are mu ical, can get. And ampu amlvaJ has fOOL-tall tage . Vaudeville que, futuri tic, satirical contributed no mall urn - over Thi 10 minutes of ballyhoo is or laps tick . but whatever these kit a quarter of a million d llar in the the noisie t, mo t colorful 10 are, they are entertaining, the Cling pasl 25 year . minutes of each half-hour egment i vigorou, the cast i determined ami will continue to erve the of arni. The dozen or 0 girl in to plea e . Univer ity thi way a I ng a If i each dance line have uffered There i more. upp rted by the community, with through back-breaking exerci e and Every year some studenl group every penny fits eaming helping practice, shin plints and aching have game or food con e sion . Univer ity tudent . muscles, and will-power wrecking Cami '73 will have the hot dogs, arni '73 appear' t be the most diet for week - all for these 10 oft drink , popcorn, peanut and all-encompa ing arni ever. minute. cotton candy that are a part of the Alumni may remember ampu The e girls are all Univer ity tu­ carnival pirit. And there will be amival a the pring fund-raiser dents. Their co tume are designed game : hit a target and dunk a am­ of the reek 'y tem. Thi~ year and made by student . Their music pus celebrity, knock over the boule i played by students. and win a kewpie d II , a well a For 10 minute the ballyhoo girls other prizes, clown with balloon, must do their be t to attract an audi­ barker cajoling audien e . ence to their tent and encourage that audience to buy ticket for their show inside.

16 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL PhOtOI complementl of Kallman Studio, Mlnnelpolll Carni is being produced by both International Festival Regent's professor Greek and non-Greek groups . Nearly 40 percent of the entries are set for April 8 Spink to speak from non-Greek student organiza­ tions . The University Band , the The University of Minne ota' Dr. Wesley W. pink, University Afro-American Coalition, the St. International Center will hold it Regents' Profe sor of medicine and Paul Freshman Board, the Latin colorful International Fe tival thi comparative medicine, will deliver Liberation Front and many other spring on Sunday, April 8, in Coff­ a free public lecture Wedne day , University groups are an incredibly man Memorial Union on the April 11 , on the Minneapolis cam­ active part of Carni '73 . University ' Minneapoli campu . pu s. His lecture, the econd Reg­ The money that the minority stu­ Build.ing on last year' successful ent ' Profe soc Lecture of the 1972- dent groups collect from their pro­ festival , a new variety of interna­ 73 eries, will be given at 12:15 ductions has been earmarked for tional foods exhibit and talent can p .m . in Mayo auditorium. Martin Luther King scholarships be sampled by those who attend. Spink, who introduced ul- which are given to disadvantaged Foods from Nigeria, Korea, fanilamide and penicillin to Univer­ students from minority groups . And France, the Middle East , Latin ity Hospital in 1936, will be dis­ if they are successful, this success America and Indonesia will be cussing his three decades of work will surely be an inducement for served, while participants enjoy a with these and other antibiotic . minority student organizations to Formosan Puppet Theater, par­ Named Regents' Profes or of participate in all the carnivals to ticipatory folk dancing, interna­ medicine in 1967 and the first pro­ come. tional student art, craft , film , fessor of comparative medicine in Already there are more entries in panel discussions and special pro­ 1970, Spink will retire this June. Carni '73 than last year - come grams for the children. He has received a National Library The International Festival will April 13 , the Fieldhouse will be of Medicine Distingui hed cholar jammed with tents, fronts, ballyhoo begin at 12 noon and run continu­ Award to begin writing book on girls, hot dog vendors , games and ously in the day . the hi torical aspects of the control clowns - and, hopefully, with of infectious disease and compara­ crowds of spectators filling what­ tive medicine, the common ground ever empty space remains . between human and veterinary Nearly 1200 students are working medicine. right now to give this year's Carni audiences a spectacular show . There are 12 students, comprising the Car­ nival Executive Board , who have been working since September to this same end . However, in order to survive, Carni needs the support of all stu­ dents, of the community at large, A Progress Report on The and, especially, of alumni. The dates for Carni '73 are Friday New University of Minnesota Alumni Club and Saturday, April 13 and 14, from 7:00 p.m. to 12 midnight. Admis­ sion tickets are $1 .50, and the tic­ Work on the beautiful Alumni Club high atop the IDS Tower kets fo r the tent shows and conces­ is progressing. At the present time we are awaiting our final sions range from 10¢ to 30,e . Tickets working plans for plumbing, electricity, air conditioning, etc. are available at the door, at D ayton 's, or by writing to Campus Colors, patterns, furniture, drapes, carpet are all in the process Carnival, Student Activities Center of being selected and ordered. North , 317- 17th Avenue S .E . , Minneapo lis, Minnesota 55455. Barnum and Bailey charge much Campaign materials are being readied to be mailed to all more than Carni '73 does . Mardi Gras is over and it's too early for former Club members and to all members of the Association the State Fair. Yet University tu ­ during May. September first is still our target opening dents will challenge any of these to date - hopefully even before. Watch the May Issue of The a show-down of fun , excitement, Alumni News for a visual presentation of our new Club. color and laughter. Come and see what the students can produce to entertain while help­ ing the University!

18 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL fLOWER GROWING

$4.87. plus 28c postage.

COMMON EDIBLE MUSHROOMS. by Minnesota Alumni Association Books Clyde M. Christensen. A guidebook for the University of Minnesota. 2610 UniverSIty Avenue identification of edible wild mushrooms. Saint Paul. Minnesota 55114 with information also on poisonous var­ ieties and a section on mushroom cook­ ___COMMON WILDFLOWERS ($6.55-) $ ______ery. (Reg. price. paper 52.95) MAA price __-",BIRD PORTRAITS ($5.15) $ ______$1 .92. plus 21c postage. ___ROCKS AND WATERS ($5.45) $ ______EDIBLE MUSHROOMS ($2.13) $ ______FLOWER GROWING IN THE NORTH: A __-, FLOWER GROWING ($3.43) $ ______MONTH-BY-MONTH GUIDE. by George E. 'PrlC6S show postage charges Luxton. Practical advice for the home gar­ (Minnesota residents only, $ ______dener on flowers. lawns. trees. shrubs 0 add 4 0 sales tax.) and house plants. with special considera­ TOTAL REMITTANCE $ ______tion of the problems of the northern climate. (Reg. price 54 .95) MAA price (Make checks payable to the Minnesota Alumni Associallon.) $3.22. plus 21c postage.

Name ______

Address ______

Membership # "The comparison between the faculty profile tw home w very clo e - In fact, better than we expected," J rdan aid . " ur simu latlon had been re on ble." major finding of the tudy was that appro irT)ately 30 percent of the total energy needed for heating could be upplied jut from appliance and equipment operation, and normal living proce e with in the homes . "Thi mean ," Jordan e plain­ ed, "that with hou ing peclally de igned to ma imize the conser­ vation of heat, it would be po 1- ble to upply virtually all of the heat­ ing energy requirement throug~ incidental operation . "Even in this realtively e treme climate, the heating y tern - In a Richard C. properly de igned home - would MINNESOTA SHAVE long only need to be concerned with con­ had a dream: "Why," they cry in Jordan trol and di tributi n rather than the the ummer, "couldn't we have supplying of additional heat. saved just one or two of tho e winter "The family living in the te,t days and u ed them to cool thing home aid it was the m (c mfort­ off now that we need itT' Jordan conducted the Invisible able hou e they had e er lived And, in the winter they ay, Family Re earch Hou e Project in in - no colds and no problem \\- itl) "Why couldn't we have saved ju t 1959 which was aimed at olving inu trouble. They were keeping one of tho e hot ummer day and thi balance of prob­ the humidity up to around 40 percent turned it loose ju:; t once thi lem. For this project, two complete even on sub-ler day ·. The re n winter?" hou e were built at tillwater, Min­ they could d it w (h t. In additl n Hope i on the horizon. ne ota to tudy the effect of varia­ to go din ulati nand vap r barner Re earchers at the Univer ity of tion in in ulation and energy in the wall , there were three pane Minne ota recently received a grant source on indoor temperature and ofgla inthewmd s.Thlsal1 \~ of nearly a half million dollar to humidity . the maint nan e r higher humidity study solar energy a a po sible Although the e home were not in the hou e with ut any condensa­ ource of electric power. equipped with olar collector' , the ti n on the wall . Director of the project i Profes- effect of olar energy on heating "I believe that If you gave me or Richard C. Jordan, head of the and cooling requirement were care­ en ugh money to d it, I uld built Univer ity' School of Mechanical fully mea ured. a hou e today in which all the energy and Aero pace Engineering . "We made the mo t extensive for heating ould be upplied by a Jordan, an expert on heating and tudie of re idential heating relati ely mall lar colle tor and cooling, ha been doing re earch on requirements that have ever been from the normal u e of energy the practical use of the sun' energy made any place in the world." within the hue - with ut any for over 20 year . Jordan aid. other heating plant - and b able "Minne ota i indeed a unique "Occupancy and equipment to heat the hou e in Minne 'ota," part of the country," Jordan operation - wa hing machines, he aid. remarked. "When a national di hwa her. dryer, lamp , tele­ Jordan al 0 mentioned the climatological survey wa made vi ion et - were imulated for a recently de igned lar heat pump everal year ago, the Twin ities family of four. More than 300 ther­ y 'tem which have proven effec­ had to be ingled out for pecial mocouples were u ed to record tive in large- ale perati n for tudy because the temperature range in ide and outside air, waJl and ummer c oling and winter heating . in thi area from winter to summer ground temperature. In fact, a H wever, he aid, "bear in mind is the greatest of any populated area weather tation wa located at the that there are many thing t day th~l in thi country - about J 40 hou e ," Jordan aid. are techni ally fea ible that are not degrees. After a winter of imulated ccu­ e n mically fea ible . ne f the "Not only do we have a problem pancy, an actual family of four goals of re ear hit bring the two (here) with heating in the winter, moved into the econd te t home. t gether ." - b Bill Halling. but there' the problem of cooling Univer'ity ien e writer. in the summer."

20 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL University Loses Four Of Its Administrators, Including A Vice President And Dean

nlver ity vice pre ident and Lofqui t joined the Uni ersity in two of hi as i tant will not return 1956 as a coun eling p ychologi t to thelf admini trati e po ition dur- and teacher of p ychology. He was 109 the next academic year. director of rehabilitation coun eling Wilham G. hepherd, 61, who and training for the Univer ity for has erved a vice pre ident for 13 year, and for three year was academic admini tration for the pa t as ociate dean of the College of 10 year, told niver ity Pre ident Liberal Arts. Malcolm Mo that he plan to re- "All of u have erved long Ign at "a date mo t convenient to period in admini trative po t and him and to the Unlver ity," Moo although we till find the dutie chal­ aid in a re ent tatemen!. lenging we believe firmly that a rota­ Fred E . Lukermann, 52, and tional policy i de irable," Lloyd H. Lofqui t, 55, a i tant Sbepherd aid. "In my own case vice pre Idents for academic it was with a en e of hock that admml traHon. both imultaneou Iy I realized that 19 of my 26 years announ ed their plan to return to on thi faculty ha e invol ed teachmg. admini trati e re pon ibilitie :. Moo. h named a committee of \tudent • fa ulty and one dean to Shepherd recommend a ucce sor to hepherd. "There come a time when Agriculture dean everyone mu t k, in hi own on­ made him one of only three ni\'er­ takes overseas job text. whether hi tmt i done and Ity fa ulty member currently in omeone el e bringing fre h energy that organization. Shepherd ha Sherwood O. Berg, dean of the to the ta k h u ld take over," erved on a number of commIttee ni ersi ' In titute of Agriculture hepherdaid. He did not tate hi for the Defen e Department. for the past 10 year, announced on future plan . ational ademy of S lence. the March 7 that he will pend the next hepherd wa appointed to hi National Scien e Foundation. two ear on an 0 e eas as ignment po Ition by Univer ity Pre ident O. ational eronauti & pace in Indone ia. Berg ill re~ain on Meredith Wil on in 1963 after dmini tration and the tate of the Uni er ity fa ulty a profe or teaching phy ic and ele trical Minne ota. of agricultural and applied engineering at the niver it for Lukerrnann had earlier indi ated economi • but will re ign hi dean- more than 20 year. While a hi plan t return thi fall t the hip a of June O. 1973. graduate tudent from 1933-37, he ni er ity of Minne ota Me enia Hi 0 er ea a ignment \\ ill be taught in the niver ity' phy i pediti n ~ hi h doe archaeolog­ for the Ind ne ia proje tofthe 1id- department. hepherd then joined I al re earch in Greece and to later e t niver itie on ortium for the techni al taff of the Bell return t tea hing ge graph . in e International ti itie (MUCl ). Telephone Laboratorie in ew j ining the ni er ity in 19 4. n co perati e thr ugh which the York. In 1947 he w app inted pro­ Lukerrnann has b en hairrnan f ni er ity and fi ur ther midwe t fe~ or f electri al engineering at the the geography department and uni er itie aid other nation in Univer ity. n iate dean of the ollege f higher education. agri ulture and hcph rd has er ed a head f Lib ral Art . He i' the uth r of medicine. In Ind ne ia. Berg will the Uni er ity' ele tri al engineer­ a number f ok and article n de elop a graduate program in the mg department, a iate dean f ial, ien e and geograph) . In~titute of gri ulture at B gor and the In titute of Te hnol g and an undergraduate agri ultural ol­ dire t r f the ph i al ele troni lege \ ith a trong re ear h emph i laborat ries. at J gjakarta. In 196 hi tion to the . 'The il pp rtunity \\ ill ati nal f ngineering e nd \ ind after

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 21 THE UNIVERSITY

Researchers get biochemi try and medicine, Projects upported by In tltu­ $300, 000 cancer grants $68,789; Dr . Ignacio Fortuny, ti nal Re earch Grant fund include as i tant profe or of medicine, a broad pectrum of cancer re earch $68,109; the Medical chool' in everal Univer ity department, Five Univer ity of Minnesota In titutional Re earch Grant om­ nyder' group will be tudying medical re earchers have received mittee, $52,500; and Dr. Leon n n-chromo oma! genetic matenals grant from the American Cancer Snyder, profe or of genetic and in ba teria and their interaction With Society totaling more than cell biology, $42,723 . controlling elements, either from the $300,000. Using yea t cell ,which hare ba terial chromo omes or them- The recipient and the amounts many characteri tic of higher elve . The e elements have been of the grant are Dr. Robert J . Roon , organi m , Roon will be tudying hown to regulate variou metabolic assistant profe or of medicine and nitrogen metaboli m to try and activitie in cell , and a characten - biochemi try, $69,243; Dr. Jame clarify how thi proce i regulated . tic of cancer cell in their freedom B . Howard, assi tant profe or of Hopefully the re ulting technique from uch regulatory control. and finding can be applied to further tudie in mammalian cell . Certain type of cancer cell are 16 years of administrative work at unable to produce all the nutrients the Univer ity," Berg aid . " We nece ary for their growth. The e all need new and different per pec­ mi ing nutrient are supplied by the tive during our lifetime ." other normal cell in the individual , Berg, 53, a former agricultural but if the cancer cell are deprived attache in Yugo lavia, Norway of the nutrient they will starve to MINNESOTA and Denmark, has tudied interna­ death. PLAYING CARDS tional economic development prob­ Howard's lab i tudying how the lems, e pecially a they relate to bacterial enzyme, L-a paragina e, agriculture and higher education . de troys one of the e ential nu­ As dean of the In titute of trients (asparaginase) and i trying Agriculture, Berg 0 er eas the Col­ to modify the enzyme 0 it will be lege of Agriculture, Home a more effective chemotherapy Economic and Fore try , as well as agent. the Agriculture Extension Service, A newly developed machine at the experiment station and interna­ University Ho pitals ha made it tional agricultural program . po ible to collect large number of Under his leadership, agriculture, normal white blood cell from home economics and fore try were donor . The e white blood cell are A quality double deck set With given status a separate college , used to treat leukemic patient who University of Minnesota Regents' and the high-school-level chool of are particularly u ceptible to infec­ Seal design - maroon on white agriculture were pha ed out and tion ince they do not have large and gold on maroon. Seal deSIgn replaced by technical chools at also on red plush box. Members enough quantitie of effective white price $2.50; others $3.25. Waseca and Crookston. An office blood cell . of International Agricultural Prog­ Dr. Fortuny will be developing ------rams was also establi hed . a method of closely matching Minnesota Alumni Association Berg, who received hi PhD from patients and potential donor to les­ 2610 University Avenue I Minne ota in 1951 , joined the en the chance of immune reaction SI. Paul, Minnesota 55114 I Univer ity in 1957 a head of the to the Iran fu ed leuko yte which I agricultural economic department are uppo ed to ward off infection. Please send Minnesota I and became dean of agriculture in Playing Card Set(s). Find enclosed 1963 . my check for $ I He was named by President Lyn­ Membership No. _____ I don John on to be chairman of the Name ______I National Advisory Commission on Address ______I Food and Fiber from 1965 to J 967 City ______and was one of 19 bu ine , union State Zip __ I and political people named to the Minnesota residents add 4% sales I tax. President' Commis ion on Income I Maintenance Programs in 1968 . ______.1

22 ALU MNI NEWS, 1973 APRI L Keith N. McFarland was named This international meeting which as dean of the College of Home awarded a fir t prize for creativity Economic. by the conference and in titute Auerbach at 57 has been a profe - division of the ational Umversity or of law at Minne ola ince 1961. Extenstion As ociation, produced From 1947 to 1961 he was a member the book, Personal Rapid Transit, of the faculty at the Univer ity of the fir t comprehen ive account Wiscon in. He is a graduate of Long available In this new field of tudy. Island Univer ity and Harvard Law Regi tration information for the choot. May conference, pon ored by the A member of the State of Min­ Univer ityofMinne otadepartrnent ne ota Con titulional Study Com­ of conference and the Center for ml ion and the author of numerou Urban and Regional Affairs, is boo and article on con titutional available from Gordon J. Amund- law, Auerbach i active m Univer- on, 222 olte Center for Continu­ ity governance, currently as chair­ ing Education, Univer ity of Min­ man of the Umver ity Senate com­ nesota, Minneapolis 55455. mittee on tenure and formerly a chairman of the niver ity Senate con ultative committee which con- Eug ene Wilson ulted with the central adromi tra­ tion throughout the recent Univer­ ity retrenchment and reallocation Professor receives proce . top McKnight Award Regents name new McFarland, 51, who ha been acting dean of the College of Home police chief, Clarke A. Chambers, profe or Economic ince 1970, hold and chairman of the ni er ity' two deans bachelor' ,master' and doctor of hi tory department, ha been philo ophy degree from Min­ awarded the 1.000 McKnight Eugene W . Wil on, deputy chief ne ola. The Army eteran has pre­ ward for hi book, Paul U. Kel­ of the Mrnneapoli police depart­ viou ly erved as an in tructor and logg and (he "Survey": Voices for ment, h been named chief of the as i tant to the Director of Re ident Social Welfare and Social JUSTice. Unlver ity of Minne ota police In truction at the Uni er it ' Chamber ' book tell the life department. Hi appointment by the In titute of griculture. 8 ard of Regent wa effective tory of the editor ofSurvey and Sur­ March 19 . vey Graphic and the hi tory of tho e Wilson, 52, ucceed ndrew journals that were under hi direc­ Verne who re igned a chief in tion in the years 1912-195_. September. Hei a 1950 graduate In it review of the book. the of the Univer ity and ha been a Journal of American History com­ member of the Minneapoli police Minneapolis will host mented: "Chambe ' tud i u eful force ince 1951 . He joined the international conference on not only for the light its hed on force as a patrolman and was pro­ personal rapid transit the de elopment of 20th century moted to traffic officer, ju enile ocial work, but al 0 for the broader officer, the detective bureau, uper­ mall car running along fi ed i ue of ocial polic embedded vi or of moral and narcotic , and guide ay , carrying people or implicit in Kellogg' ideal of precinct captain, before belOg g od non- top between tat ion , democrati oc ial engineering." named deputy chief. ould greatly redu e pollution, The M Knight v. ard are pre­ Through ut hi areer a a poli e­ increa e afety and do awa \ ith ented annually for the mo t di - man, Wil n has en ouraged higher ru h-hour traffic jam : a dream? tiogui hed book publi hed b the education f, r law officer betting From May 2-4, thi drean1 will ni er ity of Minne ota in the pre­ up in- ervi e program in c pera­ be di u ed by c ncerned planners ceding ear. The bo k are ele ted tion with in titution of higher learn­ and intere ted itizen from man b the niver ity' fa ul ommit­ ing, and he ha in ited ommunity c untrie during the econd Interna­ tee on the pre ,and the funds for involvement in la enfor ment. tional nferen e on Per onal the award are provided b the Wilson erved a project dire t r for Rapid Tran it at the Radi on Hotel McKnight Foundation of t. Paul. the Model ity Poli e Program. in Minne p Ii . The Regent have al appointed The fir t nferen e on pers nal two dean, both fwh m ha eben rapid tran it, held in late 1971, aClmg dean f their re pe ti e 01- attra ted 0 er 300 engineer , plan­ legiate unit : arl . uerba h wa ners, and go ernment offi ials from named dean of the Law ch I and 33 tate and fi e ~ reign c untrie .

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 23 Konopka named to nationa I juveni Ie justice commission

Gi ela Konopka, Univer ity pr - fe or of social work and director of the Center for Youth Develop­ ment and Re earch has been named to a national commi ion on ju­ venile ju tice tandard . The commission, which wa formed by the In titute of Judicial Admini tration and the American Bar A ociation, will develop and implement the fir t comprehen ive tandard for juvenile ju tice in the nation . "We hope to achieve ub tantive reform ofthejuvenileju tice y tern which is plagued by failure and inefficiencie ," aid commi ion chairman Judge Irving R. Kaufman University Summer Session ocial cience, Engli h literature, of the U .S. Court of Appeal for offers new workshops, fine art and linguitlc . the Second Circuit. Along with hundred of cour es "There are plenty of tudie and nearly 2,000 courses in a multitude of academic di I· reports, but there are no cohesive pline, unner e ion 1973 al 0 guideline on handling the child in Aero pace tudie for teacher , feature an Ita ca ForI! try & trouble for police, judge , legi - computer in the humanitie , fore - Biological e ion, death-edu ahon lators, social worker, chool ,cor­ try for econdary teacher and dance and drug-abu e work hop , geo­ rectional in titution and other in education are a few of the tudy graphical and archaeologi al field agencie ," he said. area to be covered for the fir t time e ion, and the umrner Arts One of the mo t important a pect during the Univer ity of Min­ tudy enter at Grand R pld , in of the standard project will be con- ne ota' 1973 Summer Se ion . northern Minne ota. ideration of how the right of chil­ Nearly2,OOOcourse inapanoply Regi tration ~ r the fir t ummer dren hould differ from tho e of of field will be offered thi year term run from May 23 through June adu Its. Pre ently, law vary greatly during the Univer ity' two ummer 5, with a final day on June 1 . tu· in how they regulate uch matter term. The fir t term will begin June dent intere ted in econd term as children' opportunity to receive 18andendJuly20,whilethe econd cour e may regi ter during the fir t­ medical care without parental per­ term will run from July 23 to August term regi tration period or from July mi ion, their acce s to information 24. Tuition for urn mer cour e i 16 through 20, with a final day on about sex and birth control, and the $12 .50 per credit hour. July 23. age at which juvenile may make Among the new 1973 offerings For further information conta ! contract or incur other legal obliga­ i a two-week aero pace engineering the ummer e ion, 135 John ton tion . work hop that is de igned to back­ Hall, niver ity of Minne ola, The commission i composed of ground e lementary and secondary Minneapoli 55455 . experts in education, soc iology, choolteacher in recent di co erie P ychology, law, ocial work, law in the pace science . Organized en forcement and corrections . Its through the cooperation of the Low-cost foreign study standard and analy i will be pub­ National Aeronautic & pace program also lished in 23 volume and will take Admini tration (NASA) and the three years to complete. University' department of aero- available this summer pace engineering and mechanic, the cour e will meet from June 18 tudent who enroll in ummer to 29. Advance application is Se ion 1973 al 0 have an pportun­ required and enrollment i limited. ity t tudy in Germany, France, Also new thi year i a fir t-term pain and Me i 0 at low-budget work hop on computer in the price . Program f tudy carrying humanitie . The work hop will pro­ vide an introduction to the u e of the computer in disciplines out ide cience and technology, uch a

24 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL both gradu ate and undergraduate This conference - open to the credit are being offered by the public with no admission charge - University in Bochum and Erlan­ is sponsored by the Associates of gen, Gennany; Be ancon, France; the James Ford Bell Library, an Barcelona, Spain; and uernavaca, organization of upporters of the Mexico. library that has accumulated an ex­ For each of these foreign pro­ ceptional collection of materials on grams, costs of tuition and fees , the history of world commerce from room and board, and book and the time of Marco Polo to the end Iran portation totals Ie than $800. of the 18th century. The cour ework at Bochum, Ger­ Those who wish to earn Univer­ many, scheduled for July 23 through sity credit for the May conference Augu t24, j limited to 40 tudents may apply to the Univer ity s his­ (both graduate and undergraduate) . tory department. Offered by the Univer ity's Gennan Sessions will be held in the new department in cooperation with Ger­ West Bank auditorium at 7:30 p.m. many's Ruhr University , the five­ May 2; at 2:00 pm. and 7:30 p .m. week term will include inten Lve in each of the programs in France May 3; and at 7:30 p .m. May 4. language tudy and cultural oppor­ and Spain. This coursework is Speaker will include Staughton tunltie . offered through the Univer ity's Lynd, In titute for Policy Studie • The programs at Erlangen, French and Spanish departments . Washington, D .C .; John P . Roche, Be ancon and Barcelona, all of Dates for the program at Erlan­ politics department, Brandeis which provide graduate work for in­ gen, Germany, are July 2-Augu t University, former aide to the late serv ice language teachers, were 10· at Besancon, July 2-Augu t 10; President Lyndon Johnson; Wallace developed by the Univer ity's and in Barcelona, June 25-July 27. Brown , hi tory department Univer- department of econdary education A lO-week language and culture ity of ew Brun wick. in joint pon orship with the Ameri­ tudy program in Mex.ico i being Eli ha P. Douglas , history can Council on the Teaching of offered through the Univer ity of department, Univer ity of North Foreign Language . These course Mione ota Morris this ummer to Carolina; John Howe, hi tory are de igned to he lp teachers run through June 18-Augu t 24 . department, Univer ity of Min­ become more aware of the aspects Beginning, intermediate and nesota; Michael Karnmen, hi tory of foreign cultures which appeal to advanced tudents who enroll can department, Cornell Univer ity. students, while gaining background earn 15 credits in language within Pauline Maier, history depart­ in the contemporary life of the coun­ the Mexican cultural etting, as well ment, University of Massachu etts, try who e languages they teach and a participate in cultural e cur ion Bo ton; Caroline Robbin , chair­ providing opportunitie to gather to hi torical and archaeological ites man of the Paper of William Penn cu lturally-authentic materials for in and near Cuernavaca, a city of Project (Hi torical Society of Pen­ cIa room tudy in their home more than 100,000 people located n ylvania); John Shy hi tory sc hools. near Mexico City . department, Univer ity of Erlangen, located in Bavaria, i Further information on the e Michigan: and Loui B. Wright. a small univer ity community where individual foreign program i al 0 former director of the Folger Univer ity tudent can participate available at the Summer Se ion Shake peare Library in Washing­ in the life of the area. Be ancon i office in John ton Hall. ton, D.C. and hi torical con ultant the home of the In titut de to the National Geographic 0 iety. Lingui tique Applique, an internationally-known center for the Noted international training of teacher of French a a scholars to partiCipate foreign language. The Summer Se - in American Revolution University finds 4% ion program in Spain will make u e Conference at University of its stud ents of the facilitie of the In titute of are from minorities North American Studie at the University of Bar elona. Ele en internationally-recog- nized cholar on the merican The first accurate ount of minor­ Enro timent in each of the it tudents at the Uni\'er it of Summer Se ion in-ser ice teacher colonial and revolutionary period ill peak at a conference on the Minnesota how that the make up program i open to 20 language less than 5 per ent of the ' tudent teacher ' at either the elementary, merican Re olution at the Uni­ ver ity during May 2 to 4 . body . Out of the 49,929 tudents secondary or college Ie el . who regi tered fall quarter at all five In addition to the e in-servi e campuse of the University , 2,036 program, tud opportunitie are were min ri tudent, or 4.1 per avaiJab le to 0 other tudent eek­ cent. ing graduate or und rgraduate credit

ALUMNI NEWS, 1913 APRIL 25 Donald Zander, Univer ity University workshop a i tant vice president for tudent affair, aid this is the fir t count for nurses MINNESOTA of minority tudent that has any real to be offered validity . During fall regi tration tu­ locally CUFF LINKS dent for the fir t time were required to fill out cards which asked them "Childbearing Today", a tele­ to check their predominent ethnic lecture erie for nurse, will be background . About 91 percent of offered locally by the Univer ity of the students turned in u able card Minne ota Wedne day evening and the figure were adju ted to rep­ from April 4 to May 2 . re ent the entire student body . pon ored by the Univer ity ' Gold plated, emblazoned Mo t of the minority tudents-- Sch 01 of Nur ing and department with University of 89 percent -- are concentrated on of conference , the five- e ion Minnesota Regents' Seal. the Twin itie campu . erie will include di cu ion of con­ A perfect gift that will The Department of Health , Edu­ umer participation in planning of be worn with pride. Mem­ cation and Welfare require the maternity care, counter-culture bers $3.25 per set of two; Univer ity to make reports on num­ impact, unmarried parent , new non-members $4.75. ber of minority student . Before legi lation. the nur ing proce a last fall tudents filled out ethnic it applie to the individual maternity background card on a voluntary patient parent education and recent MINNESOTA ba is . Le than half the tudents medical developments . filled out the cards and orne wrote The erie will be pre en ted TIE CLASP in nonsensical an wer . Minority through amplified telephone call at student totals were calculated for the ite located in Morri , Willmar, whole tudent body on the basi of Mar hall, Worthington, Mankato, les than half returned . Au tin , Roche ter, Red Wing and Figure compiled in 1971 were Winona, Minne ota. The lecturer' higher than thi year' figure , but voice i tran mitted through a tele­ admini trator feel they were Ie phone line, fed into an ampl~fier and Gold plated, made to accurate. heard through loud peakers . At complement the Minnesota " We weren ' t happy with the each location vi ual material and Cuff Links. The answer to figures we were getting voluntar­ a local coordinator will be available. many alumni requests. ily ," Zander aid. "They weren' t Direct communication between lis­ Order separately. Mem­ a dependable as thi year' . We tener and the lecture i po ible. bers $2.25; non-members think we now have the be t figure Faculty for the erie will include we can get." Margaret Hewitt, R .N ., nur e­ $2.75. Zander explained that only 91 midwife at Hennepin- ounty percent of the card were u able General Ho pital, Minneapoli ; Minnesota Alumni becau e some student refused to fill Betty Lou Hogberg, R .N ., in truc­ Association them out or filled in more than one tor in parent education at Univer ity 2610 University Avenue box . Thi year, like la t year, the Ho pital ; and La Vohn Jo ten, St. Paul, Minnesota 55114 cards were filled in anonymou Iy . R .N ., maternal child health nur ing Although law forbid a king a con ultant , Minneapoli Health Enc losed please find my per on' race as a basis for admi - Department. check for $ ___ sion , it i legal to ask it after a stu­ Each e ion will run from 7 to dent is admitted and is regi tering. 9 p .m . The erie i de Igned Send me postage paid ; the procedure the Univer ity used . primarily for regi tered and licen ed __Cuff Link sets practical nur e , but other intere ted __Tie Clasps per on may regi ter. Fee for the series, which carrie one certificate Name ______credit, i $20 . For further informa­ tion, write Sharon Vegoe, Program Address ______oordinator, Department of on­ City ______ferences, 223 Nolte Center, Univer­ ity of Minne ota, Minneapoli , State Zlp ____ Minn . 55455 or call (612) 373- 3987. Membershlp# ______

Minnesota residents only add L ______4% state sales tax to TOTA__L _

26 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APR IL Medical Technology Hayakawa to speak cussing their e timate of the correc­ at University tion sy tern' ucce e and failure. to celebrate The Brave ew Workshop will Gol den Anniversary Youth Symposium close the e ions at I p.m. Thur­ sday, April 12 in Coffman Union The Olver ity of Minne ota and Dr. S. I . Hayakawa, pre ident of main ballroom with an improvi ed the Minnesota ociety for Medical California State Univer ity, will reaction to the three-day program. Technology will pre ent a pecial give the keynote addre for thl P The ymposium is pon ored by year' Health Alert Sympo !Urn program, " Medical Technology' the Univer ity Hospital Volunteer April 10 to 12 at the Univer ity of Golden Anniver ary: 'Looking A sociation in cooperation with MIOne ota. Hayakawa , noted Ahead' ", at the Mayo Memorial Univer ity Ho pita! and the Health emantlci t, author and lexico­ Auditorium on the niver ity' Science Center. grapher, will peak on "Youth and MinneapoJi campu on April 25 to Program are avaJlable from the the Real World"; the theme of the 27. Univer ity Ho pital Volunteer ympo ium I "Today's Youth". The program I commemorating Office (373-8695). the 50th annl er ary of the fir t The ympo ium ill include lec­ graduating cla in Medical ture , panel, wor hop and a per­ Technology at the niver ity of formance by Dudley Rigg , Brave Mmne ota. New Work hop, all a e ing Three day of cour ework will be today' value and offering help in avaIlable to pre ent advance in the cro mg the generation gap. field of laboratory medicine and are Dr. Da Id Sach , California heart of Immediate value to tho e active urge n, actor and advocate of pre­ In chnlcal laboratory practice, venti e health care for the young, adminl tration and education. wIll lead off a full day of wor' hop The lei n that WIll be pre- Wedne day, Apnlil. He will peak ented \\ III deal with topic of cur­ on "The Wonder of LIfe" at 9:30 rent Intere t 10 morphology and a.m. in the Coffman UOIon Main kinetIc of bl d cell ; tis ue and Ballroom. blood cell antigen; erology and Work hop ubJect include diagnostic microbiology; automa­ behavior modifi ation, teenage tIon and radloimmunoas ay; financ­ health coun el r , drug education, mg, regulation and data proce ing the implication of rape, the fir t When You're Hospitalized y tern; nd educational program offender, the role of the court , in the laborat ry field. witchcraft and the occult, communi­ $50 A DAY The fee for the three day course catIon and tru t and emancipation, 5.00. and the pain of eparation from the In addItion, a pe ial banquet i family. TAX FREE being planned for the evening of Panel include a group of young OPTIONAL Thur day, April 26, that i de igned parolee from tate m titutJon di- to bring together laboratory per on­ nel, alumni and friend of Medical FAMILY Technology. 0 ial hour at 6:30 p.m. will precede the 7:30 p.m. ban­ COVERAGE quet pr gram at the Radi on Hotel 10 downtown Minneap Ii . Banquet re ervati n are a ailable at 10.00 MAAHOSPITAL per per on. Regi~tration for the cour ework MONEY PLAN and/or the banquet can be made b contacting the Director, For more Information H Write to: Po tgraduate Medical Education, olte enter for ontinuing Educa­ MAA Insurance AdminIstrator P.O. Box 907 tion, Univer ity ofMinne ota;Min­ Mpls.. Minnesota 55440 neapoli. 55455. MAA II ______Name ______Address,______City ______

State ip_

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 27 COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS & UNIVERSITY COLLEGE alumni will honor Dr. John Ward, Amherst president, and distinguished University teachers on April 26 Dr. John Ward The University of Minnesota's highest honor, the Out­ standing Achievement Award, will be presented to Dr. John Ward 'SOMA 'S3PhD , president of Amherst College in Amherst, Mass., at the Thursday, April 26, Annual Meeting Reservations can be made, at $5.00 per person, through of the College of Liberal Arts & University College Alumni the College of Liberal Arts & University College Alumni Association. Association, University of Minnesota, 2610 University Dr. Ward, who is also a professor of history and Ameri­ Avenue, St. Paul 55114, telephone (612) 373-2466 All can studies at Amherst, began his academic career as reservations should be made by April 24. an English instructor at Princeton University in 1952. Two years later Princeton named him an assistant professor of English, in 1956 an associate professor of English, in 1957 an associate professor of history, and, in 1961, chair­ man of Princeton's Program in American Civilization. COLLEGE OF EDUCATION alumni Ward joined Amherst College as a professor of history to honor Courtney Tommeraasen, and American studies in 1963 and was named president will hear State Senator Jerome Hughes of the college in 1971 . Among his academic honors, Dr. Ward is a fellow of Courtney Tommeraasen 'SSBS , Slayton, Mtnn , will the American Council of Learned Societies, twice a Gug­ receive the Alumni Member of the Year Award at the 18th genheim Fellow, a fellow to the Center for Advanced Study Annual Alumni Banquet of the College of Education Alum ni in the Behavioral Sciences, an honorary member of Phi Association on Thursday, May 3. Beta Kappa and a Phi Beta Kappa Distinguished Visiting Tommeraasen, who was a finalist for Minnesota Teacher Scholar, and a Fulbright lecturer to the United Kingdom's of the Year in 1971 , is completing work for an MA In Speech University of Reading. Education. He has taught speech and English In the Dr. Ward , who has published numerous articles in the Slayton High School for 17 years. American Quarterly, American Scholar, Virginia Quarterly This outstanding College of Education alumnus has Review, Yale Review and Western Humanities Review, spent one year on a Fullbright Grant to Lecture on Amerl' has written the book, Andrew Jackson: Symbol for an can literature in Norway, completed an NDEA grant in Age (1955) , which won honorable mention for the John English at St. Cloud State College with honors, and has H. Dunning Award of the American Historical Association been an in-service teacher for the English section of the for the best book in American History; Red White and State Department of Education for the past four years. Blue: Men, Books and Ideas in American Culture (1969) ; Tommeraasen is also a member of the Drama AdVISOry translated, edited and wrote an Introduction for Michael board of the Minnesota State High School League, as Chevalier's Society, Manners and Politics in the United well as director of Contest Drama and ForenSIcs activities States (1961), as well as edited Frederick Grimke's The at Slayton High School. Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions (1968) . A member of numerous community and profeSSional He is also the co-editor of the Doubleday Anchor Book organizations, he is a lay minister in the Lutheran Church Series, "Documents in American Civilization", which has The featured speaker at the alumni event is Senator 12 volumes in print. Jerome Hughes '58MA, Maplewood, Minn., who is chair· Besides the award presentation to Dr. Ward, a number man of the Minnesota State Senate's Education commit­ of College of Liberal Arts & University College Distin­ tee. Senator Hughes also studied at the University of Min· guished Teacher Awards will be made to University faculty. nesota from 1961-62 on a post-Master's fellowship and This, the 14th Annual Meeting of the College of Liberal received his PhD from Wayne State University in 1970 Arts & University College alumni group, will be held at In recent years, he has been serving as a consultant to the Campus Club on the fourth floor of Coffman Memorial the St. Paul SchOOl Board. Union, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. The event will open with a social hour at 12 noon, followed by luncheon at 12 :30 p.m.

28 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL Courtney Tommeraasen OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT AWARD RECIPIENTS, from the left, John R. McGuire '39BSFor, chief of the U.S. Forest Service, Washington, D.C.; Elvin F. Frofik '48PhD, professor of agronomy and dean of the Col/ege The Annual Alumni Banquet will open with a social hour of Agriculture at the University of Nebraska; and Sara at 6:00 p.m. in the Cardinal Room of the Curtis Hotel, Blackwell '50PhD, professor of community service educa­ Minneapolis, followed by dinner at 7 :00 p.m. tion at the New York State College of Human Ecology, Reservations for the Banquet, at $6.50 per person, Cornell University, are congratulated by University of Min­ which also includes parking, can be made by contacting nesota Vice President James Brinkerhoff following the the College of Education Alumni Association, University awards presentation at the 15th Annual Meeting of the of Minnesota, 2610 University Avenue, St. Paul 55114, Col/eges of Agriculture, Forestry & Home Economics on telephone (612) 373-2466. Reservations should be in by March 3. May 1.

Doris Miller

SCHOOL OF NURSING alumni will honor Doris I. Miller at May 7 Annual Banquet meeting

The School of Nursing Alumni Association will honor Doris I. Miller '55MEd of the University of California, San Francisco, with presentation of the University of Minnesota Outstanding Achievement Award during the group's Mon­ day, May 7, Annual Banquet meeting. The event has been scheduled in conjunction with the National League of Nursing Convention also being held in Minneapolis. Isabel Harris, dean of the University's School ot Nursing will make the award presentation to Miss Miller. A member of the University of California, San Francisco, faculty since 1958, Miss Miller will tell the alumni present about some key people who have influenced her career and education, and will point to a responsibility that School of Nursing alumni have for using their education to assist and to influence others to grow and learn and contribute. Miss Miller has served the University of California, San The title of her address is " People Need People, Or Award Francisco, as a professor and assistant dean of the School Winners Never Make It Alone". of Nursing, most recently as a professor. While at the Miss Miller began her distinguished career in Minnesota, West Coast school she has been responsible for helping where, during a 17-year period, she served as an assistant to plan and implement a post-master's program in nursing head nurse at St. Mary's Hospital, Rochester; as an instruc­ administration. tor in physical-biological sciences at Minneapolis' Fairview As a teacher, conSUltant, speaker and scholar, Miss Hospital; as supervisor of Mayo Clinic's Metabolic Miller has been an outstanding leader in the field of nursing Research unit; as education director of Fairview Hospital, administration, and has been instrumental in developing Minneapolis, and as director of that hospital's School of standards for organized nursing services and for the Nursing and Nursing Service, until she joined the Univer­ accreditation of hospitals. sity of Minnesota's School of Nursing as a lecturer from Among her current professional activities, she is a 1955 until 1959. member of the Nursing Services Advisory committee of

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 29 the Golden Gate chapter of the American Red Cross (San Francisco), a member of the advisory committee for the United States Public Health Service Hospital, San Fran­ cisco, chairman of the Task Force of the Western Council When It's Time to Renew of Higher Education for Nursing and National League for Nursing (Western Region) on Educational Preparation for Your Auto Insurance Nursing Administration, and a consultant to the chief Be Sure to Check nurses of Ft. Miley Veterans Administration Hostpial, San FranCisco, and Palo Alto V.A. Hospitals, Palo Alto. The School of Nursing Alumni Association's 13th Annual Banquet will open at 6:00 p.m. with a social hour, followed THE MAA AUTO by a 7:00 p.m. dinner, at the Curtis Hotel in downtown Minneapolis. Special tables will be available for Reunion PLAN Classes. Reservations for the banquet, at $7.75 per person (inclu­ ding parking), are available from the School of Nursing Write for Particulars, Alumni Association, University of Minnesota, 2610 Univer­ sity Avenue, St. Paul 55114, telephone (612) 373-2466. PO Box 907, Reservations should be made by May 3. Minneapolis, Minnesota 55440.

GENERAL COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION will honor local and University personalities at April 6 meeting for a congenial evening . Joy Viola '57BA chaired the event. The General College Alumni Association will honor four A fall meeting in September, chaired by past president outstanding individuals at its Seventh Annual Meeting on Robert E. Peterson '51 BSB, conSisted of a speCial tour Friday, April 6, in the Holiday Inn Central, downtown Min­ of the DeCordova Museum and a Wine-Ta sti ng Party neapolis. About 60 alumni and guests attended. Among those to be honored are Twin Cities television Seventy-five people turned out for the group's An nual personality Dave Moore '49BA, Edina, Minn., who will Meeting in February that was held in the new multi-million receive the University of Minnesota Outstanding Achieve­ dollar West Wing Exhibition area of the Museum of Science ment Award ; Fredrick J. Dresser '55AA, Minneapolis, vice and featured Robert l. Rynearson '50BEE, general mana­ president and assistant to the president of Midwest ger of the Honeywell Radiation Center In LeXington , Mass , Federal, who will receive the Alumni Service Award ; as the guest speaker. Bill Reber '64MA lead thiS very George Gibbs '63BSEd, Rochester, Minn., a member of successful event. the personnel division of IBM Corporation, who will receive Newly elected president of the Boston chapter is Dr the General College Alumni Association Member of the Robert E. Arnot '37BA, Wellesley Hills, Mass" Walter W Year Award; and Dorothy Sheldon, an associate professor Mode '43BBA '44MPA, Natick, Mass" IS serving as vice in the University's General College, who will receive the president; and Mrs. W.P. Horton '47BSN , Natick, Mass , General College Faculty Member of the Year Award. is the secretary-treasurer. The Seventh Annual Meeting will begin at 6:00 p.m. Members of the board of dire ctors include the new with a social hour, followed by dinner and the program officers and William C. Hickling '51 BSAg, Marvin G Neale at 7:00 p.m. '51BSCE, Alex R. Miller '27BA, Dr. James J. Lingane AI Vaughn, dean of the General College, and Ed Haislet, '35PhD, Allan Rudell '48BA, Robert E. Peterson '41 BBA executive director of the Minnesota Alumni Association, and William Reber '64MA. will also contribute to the evening's program. Honorary directors of the Boston chapter are Robert Tickets for the meeting, at $7.50 per person, are avail­ Aker, Dr. Lawrence Anderson, Mrs. Margaret Compton, able from the General College Alumni Association, Univer­ Governor Charles Dale, Dr. Franklin Ford, Dr. W.F. sity of Minnesota, 2610 University Avenue, St. Paul55114, Maloney, Richard Messing and Byron Peterson. telephone (612) 373-2466. Reservations should be made by AprilS.

REDWOOD FALLS (Minn.) alumni elect Wolfgang Sarrazin to head chapter BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS alumni recount year's successful activities Wolfgang Sarrazin '69JD was elected president of the Redwood Falls, Minn. chapter of the Minnesota Alu mni The members of the Boston (Mass.) chapter of the Min­ Association in February. Mary Ahrens Wetmore '71 is serv­ nesota Alumni Association can recount a successful year ing as vice president, and Robert Palmer '47CivE, as during which three major meetings drew increasing num­ secretary-treasurer. bers of alumni. Members of the board of directors include Margaret Their May 1972 Nite at the (Boston) POPS drew approx­ Smith Fitzpatrick '37BA, Robert Nelson, Larry Nelson, Gor­ imately 50 people who joined Bowdoin College alumni don Kelley, Mrs. Nancy Estebo and Royce Russell.

30 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL COLLEGES OF AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY & CLASS OF 1923 PLANS GOLDEN HOME ECONOMICS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Annual Meeting attended by FOR JUNE 7 220 alumni and guests Two hundred and twenty alumni and guests attended A Golden Anniversary Reunion commIttee, the 15th Annual Meeting of the Alumni AssOCiation of the headed by Class of 1923 members Charles Hoyt Colleges of Agriculture, Forestry & Home EconomiCS on and Catharine Coffman Knudtson, IS firming up the March 3. plans for a very special reunIon celebration on Thurs­ M. julian Erlandson 43BS '47MS, preSident of the con­ day, June 7. stituent group, presided over the banquet awards cere­ The Golden Anniversary day Will begin With regis­ mony and program. Outstanding Achievement Awards tration In Coffman Union on the UniverSity of M n­ were presented by University of Minnesota Vice President nesota's Minneapolis campus, followed by a Golden James Brinkerhoff to John McGuire, chief of the U.S. For­ Anniversary luncheon hosted by the Minnesota est Service, Washington, D.C.; Dean Elvin F. Frolik, head Alumni ASSOCiation, a Bus Tour of the UniverSity of the College of Agriculture at the University of Nebraska; campuses, Tea at University President Malcolm and Dr. Sara Blackwell, professor of Community Services Moos and Mrs. Moos' home, and an evening ban­ Education at the New York State College of Human quet at the Town & Country Club In St. Paul Ecology, Cornell UniverSity. Class member and International CIVil nghts leader The Outstanding Achievement Award is the highest Roy WilkinS Will be the evening banquet's featured award that can be given by the University to one of Its speaker at which Florence Lehmann WIll serve as alumni. Less than 600 have been awarded since the mistress of ceremonies award's inception In 1948, while an estimated SOO ,OOO Watch for further news of the reunion and ItS per­ degrees have been granted since that time. sonalities In future Issues of The Alumni News. ASSOCiation board member Barbara Thornton '53BS, who was also coordinator for the Annual Meeting banquet and program, Introduced a panel of recent graduates who presented, Glimpses of Alumni on the Job". Members of the panel Included Steve Weeks '69BSFor, Buffalo, NEW ULM (BROWN COUNTY) alumni Minn , who IS sales manager of Gabler Sawyer Lumber; name Kjolhaug to head chapter Roger Thompson 70BS and Arlo Thompson 72BS, both graduates of the College of Agriculture, who are currently Kermit Kjolhaug '50BSAg, Springfield, Minn., has been serving In the Peace Corps in Morroco; and Mary Dooley named preSident of the New Ulm (Brown County) chapter Bums 72BSHEc, Austin , Minn., who heads and is develop­ of the Minnesota Alumni ASSOCiation . Serving With him ing a child care center and teaches In a vocational program. are vice president Erroll Hauser '67, Sleepy Eye, Minn., During the business meeting portion of the annual meet­ and secretary-treasurer Ms. Evelyn Werner, Springfield. Ing four new board members were named to the alumni Immediate past president of the group IS John P. Heymann, association; they include John Halvorson '61 BS 72MA, Jr '58CivE, New Ulm, Mlnn Buffalo, Wright County extension agent; Mrs. John R. Tes­ Members of the board of directors include Charles ter '64BS '69MS, North Oaks ; Jack R EgganSOBS, a Pederson '59MA, Springfield; Dr. James Seifert '47 , New Minneapolis lumber wholesaler; and Mrs. Rosemary Gus­ Ulm , Lawrence Pelchel '58, Sleepy Eye ; Kenneth Hallberg, tafson , SI. Paul. New Ulm ; DaVid Vosbeck '69 , Sleepy Eye ; and Mrs. Gerald Dean Sherwood O. Berg of the UniverSity's Institute Dannheim , New Ulm of Agriculture presented a progress report on St Paul campus activities. the bUilding program and curriculum changes to the gathering, while University Professor Ementus and former head of the RhetOriC department, WADENA (MINN.) alumni name Dr. Ralph Nichols, was the evening s featured speaker. new officers for 1973-74 Dr. Nichols, who now lives in Port Charlotte, Fla., spoke on the Pragmal1CS of Idealism. He was presented a certifr­ Mike Rowe 71 BBA has been named the new preSident cate of appreCiation for his outstanding profeSSional ser­ of the Wadena, Minnesota chapter of the Minnesota vice by the alumni group. Alumni Association for 1973-74. Officers serving with him Include vice president Dr. Steven Soroko '65DDS and secretary-treasurer Mrs. Jim Goetz '51 BS Members of the board of directors Include Ann Richter '37BS, Sarah Yetter, Einard Waisanen '49BSAg, Mrs. George Miller, Mary Sheraw and Thomas Schultz.

MORTUARY SCIENCE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION to hold Annual Meeting on Tuesday, May 8

The Annual Meeting of the Mortuary SCience Alumni Association IS scheduled for Tuesday, May 8, at the Radis­ son Hotel, downtown Minneapolis, from 4:00 p.m . to 6 '00 p.m. Admission for the meeting is $1 00 per person.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL 31 A highlight of the late afternoon program will be the LAW presentation of the Mortuary Science Outstanding Alum­ nus of the Year Award. '36 This year's Mortuary Science Annual Meeting is being Terrance Hanold '36LLB, Minneapolis, chairman of the executive held during the Minnesota State Funeral Directors' committee of the Pillsbury Company, is a member of President NIX­ Association convention which is May 8, 9 and 10. on's Food Industry AdVISOry committee, which advises the Cost of liVing Council committee on food Hanold, who joined Pillsbury In 1946 as an attorney In its legal department, has been a member of the company's board of directors since 1961 , and served as Its preSident from 1967 through 1972. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION '50 alumni will present Distinguished Teacher Award Gene F. Bennett '47BA 'SOLLB, a partner In the MinneapoliS law firm of Rider, Bennett, Egan, Johnson & Arundel, has been electe:! The College of Business Administration Alumni a director of the Peerless China Company, Winona, Mlnn Association's board of directors will present a DIstIn­ '54 guished Teacher Award at the Annual B-Day activities Robert M. Skare '51 BSL 'S4LLB, Golden Valley, Minn., has been in Coffman Memorial Union at a noon luncheon on Thur­ appointed to the advisory board of the North American office of the Northwestern National Bank of Mlnneapohs. Skare, a partner In the sday, April 19. The award will be presented by the con­ law firm of Best, Flanagan, Lewis, Simonet & Bellows, also serves stituent group's president Harold Haglund 'SOBBA as vice president and counsel for the Lutheran Brotherhood Mutual Funds and as municipal attorney for Golden Valley '59 William R. Rosengren 'SSBS 'S9JD, a member of Internallonal CHICAGO (ILLINOIS) CHAPTER watches Multlfoods' (Minneapolis) legal department since 1967, has been Gophers at Northwestern and welcomes promoted to senior attorney and assistant secretary for the company football coach Cal Stoll He was formerly with the Minneapolis law firm of Wnght, We~ Diessner and Arnason. '69 Two events kept the University of Minnesota Chicago Wayne C. Serkland '6SBS '69LLB has JOined the legal staff of chapter members busy in March. On the 10th of the month, the Soo Line Railroad Company at ItS Mlnneapo6s headquarters at McGaw Hall in Evanston, 30 Chicago chapter rooters He was formerly With the SI Paul law firm of Fisher, Johnson & tried valiantly to bring the Gophers home a winner against Evans. Northwestern. Following the eXCiting game, alumni '71 David A Pyles '68BS 71JD, Hopkins, Minn., has been elected gathered at President Harold Rosenzweig's home to replay assistant secretary of GALIC Secuntles, Inc., a subSIdiary of Gam­ the game over refreshments. bles. He is also a registered principal for GALIC and an attorney Just a few days later, on March 14th, about 70 alumni for Gamble Alden Life Insurance and guests welcomed new University of Minnesota head football coach Cal Stoll to the Windy City at a dinner at the Svithiod Club. After hearing Cal speak, the alumni are anxiously awaiting the start of the football season next COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS fall . Also on hand to make the meeting a memorable one were Mrs. Stoll, University assistant coaches Tom Moore '35 and Ron Stark, and several of the Chicago area's outstand­ Carl Metash '3SBA, Summit, N J , vice preSldent-dlrector of produc­ ing high school athletes and their parents. tion of PARADE Publicallons, Inc., has been elected to the boa rd of directors of PARADE, the nationally syndicated Sunday Newspaper magazine. Metash, who IS also the executive Vice preSident of Diver­ sified Printing Corporation, Joined PARADE in 1951 as a production SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY ALUMNI manager. '50 ASSOCIATION board and Dentistry Century Club Robert D. Eklund 'SOBA, Hendersonville, N C., formerly national council to be feted by Dentistry Faculty sales manager for Olin Corporation's Film diViSion, has been named director of sales. Eklund JOined Olin In 1955 Members of the School of Dentistry Alumni Association's '51 board, its officers and the council of the Dentistry Century Robert l. John '51 BA, a food programs specialist In the U S Depart­ ment of Agriculture since 1965, has been appointed supervisor 01 Club will be among those hosted by the University's School food serVices at the Delaware State Department of Public Instruction. of Dentistry faculty for a special program on April 27 . Dover, Del. John has also been serving as a consultant to the Nalional Among the others who will attend the event are the Univer­ Education Finance Project, a major study financed by the U.S Office sity Relations committee of the Minnesota Dental Associa­ of Education tion, the officers and trustees of the Minnesota Dental '54 Association and the members of the Minnesota State Joel Upin 'S4BA, Chicago, III., has been named vice preSident­ Board of Dentistry. management supervisors at Clinton E Frank, Inc AdvertiSing, The Friday activities will begin with a luncheon in the Chicago. Upin, who jOined CEF in 1968 as an account execullve, Campus Club, Coffman Memorial Union on the University has been a vice president since last May. '56 of Minnesota's Minneapolis campus. Following the John Brady Benson 'S6BA, Edina, Minn., has been appOinted a luncheon, the School of Dentistry faculty will present a second vice president of Reynolds SeCUrities, Inc., an Investment program whose main theme will center on Health Man­ banking firm . Benson, who joined Reynolds In 1958, previously wa s power Utilization and its relation to Dentistry. with Piper, Jaffray & Hopwood of Minneapolis. After the conclusion of the program, those who are interested can make a short tour, at 4:30 p.m , of the new Health Sciences Building that is currently under con­ struction.

32 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL '65 Mary C. Sturgeon '6SBA, formerly the curator of Amencan Excava­ tions In Ancient Con nth, Greece, has been appOtnted an aSSIstant professor of art at Oberlin College, Oberlin, OhiO. A Phi Beta Kappa who received her PhD from Bryn Mawr Co/lege and was a Woodrow Wilson fellow in 1965-66, she is the author of the forthcoming book, The Theatre Fneze at Connth '67 Larry P. Gadola ·67BA, Edina, Minn., has been named aSSIstant franchise manager for Sveden House Restaurants, Minneapolis. Gadola, who has served as executive director of the Minnesota Junior Chamber of Commerce, preViOUsly worked for Truth, Inc., Owatonna, Minn., and West Publishing, Sl. Paul. '68 Robert Bonner '68BA, a history professor at Carfeton College, Northfield, Minn., spent last spring In London preparing a paper on the relationship between child raiSIng and the SOCIal attrtudes and behavior within England In the 18th century. ThiS fall, with a co/league, he led Carleton's London seminar '59 Mrs. Karen Tumborello Heath '68BA, Manetta, OhiO, has been Donald W Feldt 'S9BA, Westfield, N.J , has JOined SCience Man­ named a lecturer In economics and buSiness aqrTlfntstratJOn at agement Corporation as a regional vice preSIdent of Its Wofac Com­ Manetta College. pany division. He previously was an executive Vice president of A-W USAF Captain Scott W Madole '68BA has graduated from the Brands, Inc., Carteret, N J AIr University's Squadron OffICer School at Maxwell AFB, Ala. and Richard E Gower 'S9BA, St. LOUIS, Mo., has been promoted to has been assigned to Bergstrom AFB, Texas, as a weapons systems sales manager from regional sales manager by the Breaker Confec­ offICer with a untt of the Tactical Air Command tions division of Sunhne, Inc., St. LOUIS. Before jOining Breaker In Lorraine Hlavac Norman 68BA, Pompano Beach, Fla., has become 1971 , he was With Pillsbury Company for 11 years. director of admiSSIons for the new Impenal POtnt Hospital in Fort '61 Lauderdale, Fla. Waldemar P Scherer '61 BA, Puyallup, Wash., chief of the ground Gary F Qualley '68BA formerly of St Paul, has received a master's systems evaluatron diVision for a USAF unit at Augsburg, Germany, degree In International management from the Thunderbird Graduate has been promoted to a major In the USAF. School of International Management. Glendale, Anz. '63 '69 Nancy N. Klinger '63MA, Dover, N.H. , has receIVed her PhD In First Lieutenant Robert B Carlsen, a USAF A-I SkyraJder pilot psychology from Penn Slate UniverSIty, UniverSIty Park, Penn. from Wilfingsboro, N.J., was recently presented the Silver Star at '64 Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai AFB, Thailand, where he serves with Jerome D Franson '64BA, formerly of Nashville, Tenn., has jOtned the 1st Special Operations Squadron. Lt. Carlsen earned the medal lhe facuity of the Georgia College (MilledgeVille, Ga.) department - the natton's third highest decoration for herOism in combat - of education as an assistant professor of education. Franson, who April 13, 1972 recently completed coursework for hiS doctorate In SOCial science educatron at George Peabody College in NashVille, has preViously laught at Lawrenceville (ilL) Township High School, E. J. Cooper Senror High School, Minneapolis, and Hillsboro High School In ~jashVilie Dr. Paul K. Warme '64BS has been apPOinted an assistant profes­ sor of btochemlstry at The Pennsylvania State University, UniverSIty Pari<, Penn. For the past three years he has been a National Institutes of Health postdoctoral fellow in the chemistry department of Cornell UniverSIty

Upm Feidt

Eklund Gower Gadola Benson Metash Ruther

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRI L 33 Larson Wiseman Thurston

Rosengren Pyles Serkland Army Pvt. Stanley D. Miller '69BA, a member of Company E, 3rd Battalion of the 2nd Brigade, recently completed eight weeks of baSIc training at the U.S. Army Traming Center, Ft. Polk, La. '71 USAF Second Lieutenant Henry H. Holt '71 BA, Bloomington, Minn., a pilot, is currently assigned to a unit of the Aerospace Defense Command at Tyndall AFB, Fla. Second Lieutenant Gregory A. Johnson '71 BA has been awarded his silver wings at Reese AFB, Texas. He has been assigned to Ubon Royal Thai AFB, Thailand, for flying duty with a Unit of the Pacific Air Forces. Second Leiutenant James P. Moore '71 BA has graduated from the T-37 pilot instructor course at Randolph AFB, Texas, and is assigned to Williams AFB, Anz., for duty with the Air Traming Com­ mand. Beck Leach Second Lieutenant Rodney S. Ruther '71 BA, has been awarded his silver wings at Webb AFB, Texas, and IS assigned to Scott AFB, III., where he flys the C-9 aircraft with a unit of the Military Airlift Command. USAF Second Lieutenant William J. Violet '71 BA, a missile launch years in Colombia where he worked as a plant pathologist With the officer with more than a year's service, has been certified a deputy Rockefeller Foundation. missile combat crew commander at Grand Forks AFB, N.D. '67 Wayne C. Wiseman '67MS, New Richmond, Wis. has been named general manager of the Doboy Feeds division of Domam Industries, AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY & HOME ECONOMICS Inc. He previously served as controller of the New Richmond Farms division

'39 Dr. Russell E. Larson '39BS '40MS '42PhD, interim provost of The Pennsylvania State University, has been appointed permanently GRADUATE SCHOOL to the post by the board of trustee'>. As provost, he will serve as the chief academic officer of the University and as principal deputy to the president. His appointment as provost came 20 years after '48 he had been named head of the university's department of horticul­ Warren R, Beck '48 MS, who joined 3M In 1943, has been promoted ture. Dr. Larson, who also currently serves as chairman of the Univer­ to the position of research associate. He preViously has been a sity Council, is a 28-year veteran of the university faculty and has manager, research and development, in the 3M glass bubble project been dean of the College of Agriculture, director of the Agricultural since 1966. Experiment Station and director of the Agricultural and Home '54 Economics Extension Service. William A. Moore 'S4PhD, associate professor of chemistry at Mas· '50 sachusetts Institute of Technology, has been named professor and H. David Thurston 'SOBS 'S3MS 'S8PhD, a faculty member in the chairman of the department of chemistry at West Virginia UniverSity, department of plant pathology at the New York State College of Morgantown, W. Va. Moore had served on the MIT faculty smce 1955 Agriculture & Life Sciences, Cornell University, has been elected '60 a fellow of the American Phytopathological Society. The internation­ John M. Crowley '60MS '64PhD, who Joined the UniverSIty of Mon­ ally known expert in plant protection in tropical areas has been a tana, Missoula faculty in 1970, has been named chairman of that member of the Cornell faculty since 1967 after serving nearly 11 university's geology department.

34 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL '67 Army Dr. (Major) Stephen C. Marker6SBS '67MD Two Harbors, Minn., recently completed an Army Medical Department Officer BaSIC Course at the Medical Field SerVIce School. Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston, Texas. '68 Army Dr (Major) Jerald C. Sadoff 64BA 68MD, Mlnneapofi s, has completed an Army Medical Department Officer BaSIC Course at the Medical Field SerVIce School, Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston, Texas.

eMstenson Denms INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

'35 C. D. Ender 35BSChemEng, Wilmington, Del., manager of the Washington, D.C. office of Hercules Inc. retired January 1 after more than 36 years of serVIce to hiS fi rm Manager of the Washington, '62 D.C office Since 1963, Ender joined Hercules In 1936 as a chemist Richard E Faw '62PhD, professor of nuclear englneenng and a at the firm 's research center near Wilmington, transferred to ItS faculty member for 11 years at Kansas State UniverSIty, Manhattan, Kalamazoo, MiCh., plant In 1940, and was aSSigned to the company's has been appointed head of his department Faw has strong Interests corporate headquarters In 1942. and concerns In nuclear power production and radiation protection and has done extensive research and teaching In those areas '40 Gershon l. 'Gus" Gendler '40BSME, Berkeley, Cafif. a consulting '70 engineer and preSident of G.L Gendler & Associates, has been Roger N. Cornish '70PhD, preVIously communications director for named a fe llow In the Amencan Society of Healing, Refngeratlng Sterli ng lincoln Associates, Inc., has been named an assistant pro­ & Air Conditioning Engineers, Inc. Gendler began hiS consulting prac­ fessor In theatre arts at the UniverSity of West Flonda, Pensacola. lice In 19S0 after wo ng as an engineer WIth the Mare Island and '72 San Franctsco Naval ShIpyards. Robert B McCrea '72MBA, Edina, Mlnn , has been elected a vice '41 president of Platt, Tschudy, Norton & Company, Inc., Mlnneapo ~ s . John Schofield '41 BSChem Kent, Ohio, has been named manager, He JOined the firm as an Investment counselor in late 1972 after contract sales and serVIce, for B.F Goodnch Tire Company. He four years as 8 finanCial analyst in the research department of Daln, has been wrth BFG Since 19S2. Kalman & Quail. '43 Warren S. Fogelberg '43BSMlnEng, formerly plant manager at Leeds & Northrup's Ellport, Penn. faCI lity, has joined Peerless Cement SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Company, Detrort, MiCh., as vice preSident of operallons '45 Arthur T. Dalton '4SBSMechEng, Western Spnngs, III., has been '39 named group vice preSident, manufactunng for Jewel Food Stores.. Dr Clarence DenniS '39PhD, director of the DIVIsion of Technolog­ He has been WIth the company since 1966. Ical Appllcallons, National Heart and Lung Institute, IS one of ten medical educators and researchers who have received 1973 Awards '48 for Dlstlnquished Achievement from Modern Medicine, a leading Fred T. Lanners, Jr '48BSChemEng, SI. Paul, president of nallonal medical journal Dr. DenniS was Cited for " fundamental Economics Laboratory, Inc., was recently elected to the board of stUdies in relation to gastrointestinal and cardiovascular surgery." directors of The First National Bank of St. Paul '(If '52 Army Reserve Dr. (Colonel) Robert l. Chnstensen '44BS '46MB Wilfiam Stratton 'S2PhD, a staff member of the Los Alamos Scien­ '46MD, an assistant chief of psychiatry at the Veterans Admlnlstrallon tific Laboratory, has been elected VIce chairman of the U.S. Atomic Hospital, Martinez, Calif., has graduated from the U.S. Army War Energy CommiSSIon's adVISOry committee on reactor safeguards for College non-reSident instrucllon course at Carlisle Barracks, Penn. 1973. A physicist, Stratton has over 20 years of expenence in nuclear '51 phySICS, theoretical nuclear weapons design, Criticality safety and evaluation of reactor safety and development problems. Dr. F. Henry Elhs, Jr 'S1 PhDSurg, Needham, Mass., head of car­ diovascular surgery at Lahey CliniC, Boston, has been apPOinted '53 vice chairman of the execulive committee of the Division of Research D. Blair Roberts 'S3MS, wbo jOined the Westinghouse Georesearch of the Lahey Chnlc Foundation. Laboratory in 1969 as a senior geochemist, has been apPOinted '54 manager of geology and exploration at the laboratory. Dr Milton G. Ettinger 'S4MD, Golden Valley, Minn., a neurologist, '57 has been appOinted an associate editor of Modern Medlcme. He Roland l. Lippert 'S7BEE, Kansas, City, Mo., has JOined the Kansas IS chief of neurology at Hennepin County General Hospital and a City diVIsion of the BendiX Corporation as a staff engineer professor of neurology at the University of Minnesota Medical School. '70 '60 Second lieutenant Donald E. Pedersen '70BSAeroE, has been Dr John Duncan MacArthur '60MD, formerly of Duluth, Minn., awarded hiS silver wings at Columbus AFG , MISS., and is aSSIgned has been appointed an assistant clinical professor of surgery at Har­ to Norton AFB, Calif., where he Will fly the C-141 aircraft with a vard University, Boston, Mass. unit of the MIlitary Alrhft Command. '64 USAF First lieutenant Ross O. Starkson '70BS, a communlcalions­ Dr David N. Kettleson '64MD, Omaha, Neb .. a private practitioner electronics officer, has arnved for duty at Ent AFB, Colo., where and assistant professor of orthopaedic surgery at the University of he is assigned to the Aerospace Defense Command Nebraska Medical Center, has been Inducted Into the American '71 Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Second lieutenant George A. Elfner '71 BS has been awarded

ALU MN I NEWS, 1973 AP RIL 35 Eitner Ask Ender Gendler

his silver wings at Mather AFB, Calif., and is assigned to Travis AFB, Calif., for flying duty with the Military Airlift Command. Air National Guard Airman Walter H. Ask, Jr. 7 1BSAeroE has graduated from the USAF jet engine mechanic course at Chanute AFB, III. , and returned to his Connecticut Guard unit at Bradley ANG Base. '72 David D. Huehn 72BSChE, Victoria, Texas, is currently with DuPont's Victoria plant. Second Lieutenant Neville R. Moody 7 2BSMetEng, Woodbridge, Va., is serving as a research and development coordinator in the Materials Research division of the Military Technology department, Dalton Schofield Fogelberg U.S. Army Mobility Equipment Research and Development Center, Ft. Belvior, Va. Ms. Maryjo Price 72BSChE, Rochester, N.Y., has joined the East­ man Kodak Company as a quality control engineer in the color of Research, San Francisco, Calif , has been named a winner of print and processing division of Kodak Park. the Carl A. Schlack Award presented for outstanding contri butions USAF Second Lieutenant David L. Schoreder 72BSAeroE, now in the field of dental research and dental education. training at Malmstrom AFB, Mont. , as a Minuteman missile combat '63 crew member, recently graduated from the Strategic Air Command's Army Reserve Dr. (Major) Robert L. Holliday '63DDS, New missile com bat crew operational readi ness tral ni ng course at Vande n­ Richmond, Wis., recently completed the reserve components course berg AFB, Calif. at the U,S. Army Command & General Staff College, Ft. Leavenwort h, Kan, '68 EDUCATION Major (Dr.) Douglas R. Daehlm '66BS '68DDS has received a regular commiSSion in the USAF at Mather AFB, Calif. He IS currently serving as a dentist at the Mather AFB hospital '41 '70 Gordon L. Starr '41 BS, of the Recreation and Park Administration, Army Dentist (Captain) Gary R. Smisek 70DDS has completed was recently named as the fourth recipient of the Minnesota Distin­ an Army Medical Officer Basic Course at the Medical Field SeMce guished Recreation and Park Alumni Award at the National Recrea­ School, Brooke, Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston, Te xas tion Congress. '42 Army Reserve Colonel William O. Petersen '42BS '49MA, Whittier, Calif., a teacher with the Whittier Union High School District, recently PHARMACY completed the associate logistics executive development course for reserve components at the U.S. Army LogistiCS Management Center, '52 Ft. Lee, Va. Lieutenant Colonel Bertram G. Leach '52BSPhm, Aberdeen, Md , '71 formerly an officer on the general staff of the U.S. Army Test and USAF Second Lieutenant John R. Vanderwill 71 BS, has been Evaluation Command, has received the Legion of Ment - the assigned to a unit of the Strategic Air Command at Ellsworth AFB, nation's second highest non-combat military decoration - upon his S.D., as a pilot. retirement. He was cited for exceptionally meritorious service to the Command as an aviation staff officer, research and development coordinator, test manager, study group leader and chief of the Com­ mand's Plans and Study Programs office, His service began at the DENTISTRY Aberdeen Proving Ground in 1968.

'45 Dr. Charles A. Waldron '45DDS, formerly director of speciality training, has been named assistant dean for speciality training at Emory University's School of Dentistry, Atlanta, Ga. He will continue to serve the institution as professor and chairman of the department of oral pathology. '55 Colonel Gilbert E. Lilly '55DDS, U.S, Army Dental Corps, chief of the maxillofacial science division of the Letterman Army Institute

36 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL -

Cha rle. Frederick Remer '08BA, 83, A rdIS L . Wood (M! . Weldon E .) '47BS, Pacific Grove, allf , a p r ofe~~or of Mmneapoli , died Sept _ 2, 1972 . economic, died July 2, 1972 He taught In DEATHS William Conrad Bracken ' 8BA , Edm3 , the Philippine and hlna, and at Harvard, Minn., died March 6, 1970 . Wilham, ollege an d the nl ve r ~ ll y of Mr. Elde. ' 48 BS, Highland. Cal .. Michigan died recently. George R Jone ' 14BS, 82 , dina, M r • M . H Seavey ' 24BS. We tford, Hamet A Gull '48 B5, Chino, Cal ., died Mlnn , prominent In the electncal Industry, M a , died ten ye= ago . recently died ov 21, 1972 arl Bertram '26BS, 69, Sarasota, Fla ., Dudley Howard Miller '48BA , Interna­ Glenn Lewis '20BA, 80, Hopkln\, M inn ., director of the Appleton (Wi ) Vocational tional FalJ , M mn ., dl/'d In 1963 . fa nner chief hbranan of the M lnneapoil School for 25 years , died Dec 24 . 1972 , Mary F . Och ' 48BS, secretary of the Slate Public Library, died Jan . 3 after a long illne . Board of u~ing for uth Dakota _ died Bemlce V Wilham on '20BA died ept atherine 1. Crowe 26BS , died ov . 9. In 1970. 15 of a heart attack . Dr. Robert Quentin Royer '49MS , Hun­ MI) . J T . elte, '21 B , Rutherfordton , Dr M ayberry Earl '26MA ·28PhD . 75 , tmgton Beach , Cal ., a fello,,- in denti try . C., died Aug 14 Omaha, eb . , retired chairman of the of the M ayo Graduate School of M edicme Dr L. H iegel 21DD , M lnneapoh" mathematic department at the UOlve~ity of and later an InstruCtor there , died 'ov_ 13. died recently ebraska, Omaha, died of cancer ov . 26 , at age 52 . Manon G T homp on ' 21B S, Pasadena, 1972 Wallace A Eric n 'SOBS . Mentor, Cal died April 3 Jame C M oronay ' 27BA , 66, Scarsdale , Mmn , died recently . AmlmG 0 10n'22B ,71, tuart,Fla ., Y , a lawyer with the legal department Dr. William H . Ey ter, Jr. '50M . 54, Iturtd ,upenntendent of the Winnetka, III , of the tandard 011 Company of ew Jer-ey Ormond Beach, Fla., died pril . rel­ ~ater and elec tncal department, died Oct . from 1944 to 1971 and former general coun­ dent m dermatology In the M ayo Graduate 29. el for Es 0 EJtports, died In Stockholm . School of M edicine, Roche ter, from 1948 Dr. W R John on '24MD, Biltmore weden, Jan 13 to 1951, Dr E y ter practiced in Toledo_ Fore , Tenn ,died ug. 6. T errance L Web ter ' 27BS. \\ ayzata . Ohio later in M elbourn . Fla., and in Mlnn , died June 7,1972 Ormond Beach, Fla. Dr T. H Herder '29DD . Graceville, M lnn , died recently Kenneth Duncan M arie A orkne ' 29B , 100rhead, 'lOBS, 1958 OAA Mlnn , died recently Farrington Daniels Charle H Workman '30AM , Lake ' 10BChem ' 11MS City, M inn , died l une 5, 1970 Kenneth Duncan '10BS, Duluth, Ether WlShruck Finberg ' 31 B , St Paul. Minn., 1958 reclptent of the Farrington Daniels. an internation­ died Oct 6 University's Ou1standlng ally-known physical chemist and Mitche ll Bumgardner '32A M , M inerai Achievement Award, died In professor emeritus of chemistry at the Wells, Tel( , died Sept 27 November. Born In Fergus Falls, University of W isconsin, died June Dr Fabian T . Bofenkamp '33DDS, Minn., in 1887, he spent most of his 23. He was 83 years old. Prince ton, M lnn , died re ently profeSSIonal life as an engineer and Engaged in solar energy research. C ia) ton E Ebert' 33 Bellendorf, execu1lve In the mining dlstncts of 1 , Dr. Daniels wrote over 300 scientific Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin. Iowa, died M ay 2, 1969 papers and eight books on his work. l ohn William M amara '33BS , t. Paul , Starting as an engineer with the He began his teaching career in died Feb. 1966 . Oli ver Iron Mining Company In 1913, 2, 1914 at Worcester Polytechnic M artin Patmo '33MD, K alamazoo , Du ncan subsequently became Institute in Worcester. Mass. After superintendent of various mines M iCh ., died Sept 2, 1971 serving in the chemical warfare Ihroughout the Iron mining area. J M . ogard'33LLB, GreatFali , 1onl.. service during World War I and after He eventually became manager of died Sept 16, of a heart attack doing research at the Department of Edward Heath oehrle ' 33 B , M m- all the ore mines for Pickands­ Agriculture in 1919-1920. Dr. Daniels neapoli. , died June II, 1971 Mather Company. became a member of the University E. L. Ed 'J5B , Rockville , M d., died Throughout his career in mining, of Wisoonsin faculty as an assistant Duncan ac1ively supported the five years ago professor, Upon his retirement in Dr . 1. undet '36MD, Kadoka, D , University of Minnesota, espeCially '959 he was named professor died Ju l~ 14 the School of Mines and Metallurgy emeritus. In 1955 he was appointed Dr R. J Palne ' 37 1D, Buffalo, y , and Gopher athletics. He served director ofthe solar energy research died rece ntly . as the School of Mines' laboratory at the University of OklO G B yum '3 .D , respresentative on the Institute of W isconsin. died in I 66 Technology's AdVISOry Board and During his retirement, Dr. Daniels M ~ E C To,,- nsend '39B , t Paul. encouraged many promising continued research on solar energy athletes to attend the University. and participated in scientific programs He had been president of the and conferences. Duluth Port AuthOrity during the For his work, the American Chemical development of the St. Lawrence Society awarded him the Priestly Seaway, director of the Duluth died rece ntly Gold Medal in 1957, in addition to Playhouse, president of the Duluth Dr Emil H Bergendahl '46MD, F rt the Willard Gibbs Medal and the Kiwanis Club and president of the a ne, lnd ., dled of a h m atta kmMarch, James Flack Norris Award for Duluth Symphony Association. 1971 e cellence in chemistry teaching, In ProfeSSionally, Duncan served as harleM n, 1950 the University of M innesota president of the Engineers' Club of presented him with the Outstanding Northern Minnesota and of the Achievement Award. He also received Duluth Engineers' Club, and as an honorary doctorate from • chairman of the Minnesota sec1ion . DaV IS, Minnesota. as -well as from the of the American Institute of Mining University of Rhode Island and the and Metallurgical Engineers. huldberg '47MD, Den\er, University of Dakar in West Africa. I , d led In n car nce Ident In pI. 197:!

ALUMNI NEWS. 1973 APRIL 37 Chancy u ' 57BA, '61MD died ept. 22, Dr. rllng W . Hansen '15MD, Min- rrt . Herfindahl '39BA, 54, Falh 1972 . net nka, Minn , died De 17 of ancer of hurch, Va., a ~enior research a;SOClatc for Russell J . Lawrenz' 59B , t. Paul , died the ~pine . Resourees ~ r the ulure, died of an apparenl In 1971 . Miss JennIe William ' 16BA, MIn- heart atta k while on a kllng Inp In epal Dr. John DaVid mith , Jr. '59DDS, 37, neapolt~, Died ov. 10 . on 0 16 Renton , Wash . , died in a plane crash Mary lizabeth Bogges; Redmond Dr qUire '39MD, harle~ton , W December 20, 1972 , while fiYlng from Bel ­ ' 17BA,87, lark!oburg, W. a., died pt Va , died recently . levue, Wash ., to the Twin Itles . 28, after a lengthy IlIne" . he was the fir t Mrs . Reid '41 B , Mlnneap h,. died A . D. kon '66BA, St. Paul, died Jan . 4, public s hool music teacher In the larksburg recently . 1970. school and had taught In the M inneapoh Milton Kaplan '43BA died recenlly Elizabeth M. Ren ch, t. Paul , died school yMem where he w In charge of Dr. Arden L Mill r '4300 ,59, Ptra­ August 31 . mu;ic education dl,e alley, nz . died Feb I Fraine . Whitney '64BA, Bloomington , H . R . earle '17B , t Paul, died Ie Welngarden '43B , Mlnncapoh , Minn ., died ov . 4 . recently . dIed In January T .F . Langford, Jr. '66BS, MinneapoliS , Dr, Ge rge Ruhberg'21MD,79, anta Stewart Th m,on '47B ,Mlnneapolt , died Dec . 3, 1972 . Barbara, ahf., a retired neuro-psychlatn t died recently ancy Phillops inger ' 72B ,Omaha, who maintained a pnvate practice in t. Paul Loul M hamberlaln '4 B , Mm· Neb., died Nov . 21 , 1972 , after an IlIne,s for 25 years, died Jan . 23 neapolt ,died recently of three m nths . lice Reynold~ Hunt,lnger (Mr, Ro s Robert Indehar '54BA, t Paul , dleG L ) ' 22B ,73, Grant Pas, Ore., died Jan . Jan. 20. 25 Mr I. Pohl on '54JD, Mtnneapoh • MI~ Ruth I Lundholm '22BA died pnl dIed recently . Clara Woodward Blegen '07B ,87, Oak­ 4,1972 . Dr. Allen arfF ' 5500 , Duluth, land, alif., wife of the late Theodore mlm G . Olson '22B , tuart , Fla ., died Minn ., dIed recently Blegen who was dean of the University of Oct 29 . Dr. lrvamae Applegate '57 00,52, Saul Minne,ota Graduate chool from 1940 to ChfF O . hnstopherson ' 23B , Apple­ Rapid" Mtnn , dean of the chool 01 Educa· 1960, died July 24. ton, WI ., died Aug. 23 . tlon at t Cloud tate ollege, died recently Fred W . Buck '09BS, Duluth, Minn ., died Rueben A . Lar on '23BS, Phoeni ,Ariz., after an extend d dine Oct. 30. died March 19 , 1971 . Dr. Raymond Albrecht '59MD, 40, t Mr. H .S . elson ' II LLB, Owatonna, Eleanor Piper RIley (Mr . RIchard .) Paul, a ehnteal profe sor of obstclnc and Minn ., died Oct. 27 . '24BA, Winnipeg, Manitoba, died Oct. 2 . gynecology at the ntver>tly of MIOne la. Dr. F J . Rogstad ' 13DDS, Detroit Lake, RIchard G . Edwards '25B , EscondIdo, died of a lung adment pt 23 Minn., a University of Mmne ota Regent Caltf., died July 3 . from 1939 to 1949 and mayor of DetrOit gnes Thorvtlson Sommer '28B ,70, Lake in the early 1950's, died Jan 14 . Excelsi r, Minn ., who wa, a member of the Univer ity's champion debate team coached by Wayne Morse that abo Included Harold Dr. Lloyd E. Musburger tas en, Viola Hymes and edric Adam. '23005, 1962 OAA among tiS members, died Feb. 16 . One of the first reCIpients of the Ruth Peterson Stein (Mr. Em;t) '28BA, University of Minnesota's Out­ Long Island, Y, died ept. 24 . Dr. Lloyd Ernest Musburger standing Achievement Award, Guy Mr. P H . Wernicke '28B ,Minneapolis, '23DDS , a 1962 recipient of the N. Bjorge, 65, of San Francisco, died recently . UniverSIty of Minnesota's Out­ died December 1, 1972. He Dr. H .E. Roe '29MD , Pomona, ahf., standing Achievement Award, received the OAA on October 5, died in 1971 . died February 4, In Jamestown, 1950; the first OAA was awarded Dr. Victor A Mulligan '30M D , 69, N.D, after haVIng been ill for sev­ in 1949. Phoentx, Ariz., who pioneered medical aid eral years. A 1912 graduate of the Univer­ call by ski-plane while practicing medl Ine A dentist active in public health sity, Bjorge had a long career in In orth Dakota, died Feb. 24 . programs in North Dakota, Dr the mining industry, beginning as Daniel S . Feidt '32LLB, 65, Key Bis­ Musburger served on the Gover­ an engineer with Pickands Mather cayne, Fla., a former Minnesota tate legIS­ nor's Health Planning Committee & Company, McKinley, Minn. His lator and president of Twin ity Lines Inc ., for 10 years. He was responSible work took him to Venezuela, died of cancer Jan . 19 . for the estabhshment of the diVI­ Arizona, Sou1h Dakota and Califor­ Kenneth B. Haugen '32B ,Minneapolis, sion of Oral Hygiene In the North nia, during which time he held a died ept 13, 1971 . Dakota Health department and variety of positions: engineer, Mr. R.B. Hooper '32B , t. Paul, died actively promoted water flounda­ geologist, general manager, vice April 23, 1969 . tion for Jamestown and other cities president and director. He spent Mr . Morns to ller '33BS dIed June 29, in North Dakota. 30 years with Homestake Mining 1971. He held memberships in the Company, the last 22 as vice presi­ George B. Herman, Jr. ' 4B , MIn­ American College of Dentists, the dent and director. In 1962 he neapohs, died Jan. 14 1972 . American Legion and the James­ became di rector emeritus and con­ larence nck tlen '35J 0 , Tagus, .0 ., town Rotary Club. He served as sultant of the firm. dIed Aug. 17. president of the North Dakota Bjorge held memberships in Jean . Gilruth (Mrs . Robert) '35PhD , State Dental Society in 1941 . several organizations, such as the 60, Dicki nson, Tex ., Wife of pace pi neer Before entering the UniverSity of Mi ni ng and Metallu rgical Society of Dr. Robert R . Gilrulh, died Dec . 10 after Minnesota Dental School in 1920, America ; AIME, from which he a heart attack. Dr. Musburger served in the U.S. received the Legion of Honor Dr W .F. Kva le '37M , R che ter. Army during World War I. He was award in 1954; the Society of Minn ., died In 1970 . the principal of Fargo College Economic Geologists; the Mining Mr. F . W . Johnson '38BBA , t. Pau l, Academy after his graduation from Club, New York; the Bohemian died recently. Fargo College In 1914 before Club, San Francisco; the Univer­ enlisting in 1917. He practiced in sity Club, New York; and Delta Jamestown for his entire dental Upsilon fraternity. career.

38 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 APRIL Right now, you can get $10,000 of GROUP life insurance for a lot less than you might think through the .. .

available exclusively to members

Once you're covered, cash benefits will be paid to the beneficiary of your choice for death from any cause. at any time. In any place

------~I Minnesota Alumni AssociatIon Group LIfe Insurance I I I I Big Benefit a nd Low Cost Application I I I I A M O U NT O F LOW I I G R O UP S EMI-ANNUAL I YOUR AGE INSU R ANC E ' 1 PREMIUM I I UNDER 25 $10,000 $ 11 .00 I I 25 · 29 10,000 14.00 I Last Name (Prtnt) First Name Middle 'nlttal I 30 34 10,000 1B.50 I I 35 · 39 10,000 , 25.00 Street Address I 40 · 44 10,000 36.00 I I 45 · 49 10,000 51 .00 I City State ZIP Code I 50 54 10,000 73.50 ,1 55 · 59 10,000 10B.00 I Date of Birth Class, or years at U of M I 60 and Over (Amounts of Insurance and premiums , change after age Wro te for details) 1 6 0 I BenefiCiary (Prtnt Name as Relattonsh,p I MARY DOE . not MRS JOHN OOE) I • HI her amounts at Insurance re available I For Information write Minnesota Alumni ASSOCI8t10n I I Insuranc Admln,str tor I 1 1 I It' s easy to enroll 1 Statement of Health 1 1 Complete Group Life Insuran~e Appllcallon I I 2 Mall to Minnesota Alumni Assoclalton The follOWing Information IS submitted as evidence I Insurance Administrator of my Insurablltty: Weight ____ Helght ____ I SUite F,. Hundred 400 So CounlY Rd 18 I Have you ever been declined or rated for Itfe ,nsur I M inneapolis Minnesota 55426 I 3 Send no money now you w,lI be nOl,fled of Ihe approval ance? (If yes. give details below) ______I I of your ppllcallon and will receive your ',rsl billing from Within the past five years. have you been conf,ned the adm'nlSlratOf for more than five days for any illness or Injury or undergone any surgical operations' • You Are Eligible, , , If vou ~,e a m .. mber of the MAA, (If yes, give details below) ______under age 60, and are ellher ctlvelv emplov d or ar an unemploved hous wde Cover ge lor residents of Te s. Are you in good health? ______Ohio. N 'IN Jersey Wisconsin nOt avsllaul at th s tln1e. Comments: • Generally No Physical E )(am • , , usually onlv the short III I statomenl of health on the !'nrollment form '5 necessary

• Beneficiary •• • you nalne your own ben flciarY f which you may change at any tlf"e Spec' t benefic I tV 8rr nge ~I ments an be "lade to tit your own reQulren1ents Settle I hereby apply for that coverage for which I am Or ~ I m03llts 01 de th claims as monthlv Income rnav be may become eligible under the above Group Policy provided Issued by the Prudential Insurance Company of ~ • No Premtum To Pay While Disabled , •• your Itt onsur Am9 rica to the Minnesota Alumni ASSociation. nee p, mturns are W IV d nd Insur n e rernatrl$ In force If ~ you become totaliV disabled (as defilled In the contra t) befor ag 60 ___ x______~ • You May Change .• ,10 permanent ",oltey which bUilds Date Signature Ca h vatu s 10r r tlr ment When you termlnat menlber

hIp Hl MA I when you r ach 9~ 74, or wh n any Insurance I rmillates l> ause 01 a chang 111 "9 b vond age 60 you nlav con""~1 t th anlOunt of group 'de 1Il5Uf nee which t fin PrudentIal In te to flY H'Id,vldual pol! y Of 111 Insuri;lnce th n being ';j~U d by tt1 '''sur :InC ampany otl)('( til "t rm Insurance 1 Or "Y poliCY contallHn9 dls~lb,llty or other llppl ,nentary I ..a..l>.I .'O. '. '.lS...... LJ ______----- ______1 THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTJ. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

esceped

9 WONDERFUL DAYS, September 22 - October 1, 1973

• PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS' 707 JET CLIPPER • All airport transfers are included in Vienna, as charter, Twin Cities International Airport to are baggage handling and porterage charges. VI ENNA, AUSTRIA. FIRST CLASS meal and beverage service aloft. Only 179 passengers fill • Both the Austrian departure tax and the U.S our plane. departure tax ($3 .00) are included. • Accommodations for seven wonderful nights at the deluxe VIENNA INTER-CONTINENTAL • Special FAREWELL PARTY at your hotel! HOTEL, located in the heart of Vienna. • Your "Vienna Escapade" is fully escorted by • FULL AMERICAN BREAKFASTS at your hotel experienced tour managers. Also includes a each day! special HOSPITALITY DESK in your hotel. • You will also enjoy either LUNCH OR DINNER at your hotel daily! This meal plan provides you • Visit the famed SPANISH RIDING SCHOOL and with the opportunity to sample Vienna's many enjoy a concert by the VIENNA BOYS CHOIR cafes on your own. at a small additional cost. Optional OPERA TICKETS will also be available. • Special welcome - ARRIVAL COCKTAIL PARTY at your hotel. • Special OPTIONAL TOURS will be offered to • Deluxe half-day private motorcoach you , such as visits to the Vienna Woods, and ORIENTATION TOUR to see Vienna's many overnight tours to Salzburg and Budapest . unforgettable sights. and others, all at group rates!

SPECIAL MINNESOTA PRICE OFFICI AL RESERVATION FORM SEND TO : only UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 2610 UNIVERSITY AVENUE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA 55114

Please make __reservations in my name. $ 579 ~~~ron Enclosed is my check for $ to cover my reservations. frG. n MIn r I, Membership # ______Plus 10% taxes and services, payable in NAME ______advance. ADDRESS ______'Open to members of the University of Min­ nesota Alumni Association and immediate CITY ______STAT<-.E ______ZIP __ families only. $150 deposit per person required. Make check payable to Vienna Escapad' 1973 MAY • --

Right now, you can get $10,000 of GROUP life insurance for a lot less than you might think th roug h the ...

available exclusively to members

Once you're covered, cash benefits will be paid to the beneficiary of your choice for death from any cause, at any time, in any place.

Minnesota Alumni Association Group Life Insurance Big Benefit and Low Cost Application

AMOUNT OF LOW GROUP SEMI-ANNUAL YOUR AGE INSURANCE' PREMIUM UNDER 2 5 $ 10,000 $ 1 1.00 25 · 29 10,000 1 4 .00 Last Name (Print) First Name Middle Initial 30 · 34 10,000 1 8 .50

35 - 39 10,000 2 5 .00 Street Address 40 - 44 10,000 3 6 .00 45 - 49 10,000 51 .00 CitY StatB ZIP Code 50 - 54 10,000 7 3 .50 10,000 55 - 59 1 08.00 Date of Birth Class, Or years 60 and Over (Amounts of insurance and premiums change after age 60. Write tor details.) Beneficiary (Print Name as Relationship • Higher amounts of Insurance are available. MARY DOE . not MRS. JOHN DOE) Fo( information write Minnesota Alumni A ssociation Insurance Adminis trator

It's easy to enroll Statement of H ealth 1 Complele Group Life Insurance Appllcallon 2 M all to M lnnesola Alumni ASSOCl3110n The following Information is submitted as evidence Insurance AdmInistrator of my insurability : Weight ____ Height ____ SUite Five Hundred. 400 So County Rd 18. Have you ever been declined or rated for life insur M inneapolis. M,nnesola 55426 ance? (If yes. give details below) ______3 Send no money now you Will be nOllf,ed of Ihe approval of your appllcallon and Will receive your first billing from With in the past five years. have you been confined the administrator for more than five days for any i llness or injury or undergone any surgical operations? • You Are Eligible . _ . if you ~re a member of the MAA. ( If yes, give detail. below) ______under age 60, and are either actively employed or are an Are you in good heal th? ______unemployed houseWife. Coverage for residents of Texas, Ohio, New Jersey, Wisconsi n not available at thiS time. Comments: • Generallv No Phvsical E xam .. . usually only the short statement of health on the enrollment form IS necessary. • Beneficiarv ... you name your own beneficiary , whIch you may change at any time. SpeCial beneficiary arrange ments can be made to fit your own requirements Settle- I hereby apply for that coverage for which I am or ments o f death c laims as a mor'thly income may be may become eligible under the above Group Policy provided / issued by the Prudential Insurance Company of • No Premium To Pay While Disabled _ . • your life insur America to the Minnesota Alumni Association. I' ance premiums are waived and insurance remains In force If you become totally disabled (as defIOed in the contract) I before age 60. -----X______I • You Mav Change ... to a parmanent poliCY which bUilds Date Sign ature I' cash values for retirement, When you terminale member ship in MAA, when you reach age 74, or when any insurance ~ • .In""I~' terminates because of a change in age beyond age GO. you ,.,UUtil",u, I may convert the amount of group life insurance which term I issuedinates toby anythe individualinsurance cpolicyompany of otherlife insurance than term then insurance being "....,..,V<..x,.A..!Y~J...~)(jv.J....II..~<..;<...... ;<...Il,.Jv

Operation Turnaround in Univer ity of Minnesota Intefcollegiate Athletics is now a year old, and, under Paul Giel's inspired leadership, things are starting to move.

The focus of the turnaround is to bring back winning football to Minnesota since winning football is the only way to attract the attendance needed to bring in the funds necessary to erase the current deficit and to underwrite the Univer ity's entire program of Intercollegiate Athletics. Yes, it's true, football pays the way for the rest of the intercollegiate sports.

There is no doubt in my mind that Cal Stoll and his staff will soon have Minnesota in the winning column again. These are high caliber, dedicated people who know their bu iness, and their business is recruiting and coaching, in that order. They are uper salesmen with a great product - a fine education at a great University - and they are most convincing.

So be assured - winning football is on its way at Minnesota - and attendance will pick up. But there is one major problem that must be resolved first: Minnesota' pre ent tadium is inadequate, and a new stadium is a must if our Gophers are again to be "golden" .

Fortunately. there is a stadium plan ready and waiting. A feasibility tudy was made and already has been pre ented to the Regents which provides four plans for the rebuilding of Memorial Stadium and the revitalization of its facilities.

The o-called ultimate scheme of this study provides just what is needed at a mode t co t of $22.2 million and would give the University the large t domed stadium in the nation with a seating capacity of 65,000. By lowering the playing urface of Memorial Stadium twelve feet and adding retractable or tele coping eating, the ize of the playing area would be doubled from two to four acre and the eating would be twenty feet clo er to the playing field, creating a better igbtline.

The ultimate cherne al 0 includes double-decking two ide and the hor e hoe end of the stadium, building an elaborate Athletic-Recreational Center on the Cooke Hall end of the stadium, as well as upgrading the stadium' under- tructure, adding a new pre box and photography deck, and new backed and contoured seats to the entire eating area. Seat would be 18 inche wide.

A permanent grid would be imposed on the field in measurements that wou ld allow the playing surface to be divided into appropriate activity areas for virtually any port. A 1h mile tra k would run around the outside of the pLaying grid, with a 220 yard track in the middle of the field; a basketball court placed at the end of the field would eat 25,000 pectator. Thi arne onfiguration could be u ed for hockey. U ing the playing grid, three touch fo tball field or three oftball diamonds or four 60 120 foot a ti ity modules could be u ed sirnultaneou ly.

Al 0, in the thletics-Recreation enter ther would be wimming and di ing pool • new gymnastic and handball fa ilitie • a well as ba ketball, volleyball, tennis, badminton and fencing facilitie . Under the stadium ea would be squa h, handball, wrestling, bo ing, judo. karate, golf dri ing and weightlift­ ing unit . The addition of these recreational sport facilities would allow (Conrinued on page 4)

ALUMNI NEWS, 1913 MAY 3 POINTS OF VIEW Your Minnesota Plaque

This large, colorful plaque has been custom-designed for the Association. the stadium to be used by the students 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, It makes an impressive wall display 52 weeks a year. for office, study, recreation room­ What about financing? Becau e of the tadium renovation' potentially great even the outdoor patio .•. Com­ recreational value to student , orne feel that a part of the fund for it might pletely waterproof. be forthcoming from the legi lature. Per on ally , I feel this renovation could and hould be financed through private fund . New "space-age" material duplicates the feel, weight and appearance 01 To get the job done, Paul Giel needs that iWmed stadium for football; natural wood. Hand-finished in rich the University needs it to provide proper athletic and recreational facilitie brown and oHicial University colors. for its students; our Metropolitan Area needs it a a place for the Vikings, Measures 14" x 17" x 1 1/2". a place for trade show ,convention and fairs -- all without cost to the tax­ payer. Price for members $12.95; non-mem­ bers $15.95. Postage prepaid. Would it be possible for the Vikings to use the 65,OOO-capacity domed stadium for its games? Minnesota residents add 4% sales tax to TOTAL order. Right now the Big Ten Conference is facing the problem of financial deficits in its intercollegiate athletic programs; the coache and athletic directors are trying to do omething about it. While the la t action of the Send to : Big Ten was to deny Northwestern Univer ity penni ion to lease their football Minnesota Alumni Association tadium to the Chicago Bear, the e are different times and difficu It condition . 2610 University Avenue Things have changed -- things will continue to change. There are new face St. Paul, Minnesota 55114 at the window -- new athletic director , new coaches, new faculty repre enta­ Enclosed please lind my check for tives, new president . Next time the vote could well be different. $----- Total construction time for the stadium renovation is approximately 18 month; Kindly ship __ Minnesota Plaques it would take three month to construct the roof. Name ______Now is the time to put the whole package together. Cal Stoll will be ready with a winning team by them . The Vikings need a home and the University, Address ______a year-round student recreation center. Clty______

~~A . O~ - State ______Zlp -

4 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE John E Carroll '33BChemE • • . • • • • ••. " • PreSident Harry E, Atwood '31 BA ., •••.•••. First Vice President George T. Pennock '34BBA .... . Second Vice President Barbara Stuhler 'S2MA . Secretary alumni news Franklin D. Bnese '28llB ..•.•••.•...Treasurer UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA Gerald H Fnedell '48BA 'S1JD •...... •••••. Member Geri Mack Joseph '46BA .....•...••••..••. Member Robert Hugh Monahan '43MD Member MAY 1973 VOL. 72, NO.9 Carl N. Platou '51 MHA . . •••••.....••• Member Wallace E. SaJovlch 'SOBBAS6MHA ...... ••.Member Thomas H. Swain '42BBA .•••...•••.•....•. • .Member Oscar A. Knutson 27llB •.•.• Past PreSident EdWin l. HalSlet '31BSEd '33MA '37EdD ..... Ex. Director in this issue BOARD MEMBERS Term expl,..1973: Fred J Agnrch '37BA, Harry E Atwood HIgh atop the IDS Tower In the '31BA. Gerald H. Fnedell 48BA 'SlJD, Joseph Karesh center of downtown Minneapolis '29BA, Oscar A. Knutson '27llB, MISS Melva E. lind will open the exciting and new '24BA, George T. Pennock '34BBA, Carl N, Platou '51 MHA, Alumni Club. Read about this J A, Stromwall 'SOBA. fabulous new club that has been designed for you, the Minnesota Term expl,.. ,974: Franklin Bnese '28llD, John E. Carroll alumnus, and Its Skl-U-Mah '33BChem E, Robert G, Cemy '32BArch, MISS Marilyn Lounge, Regents' Room, Board Chelstrom 'SOBA, lynn Hokenson '44, Harold Melin Room, Maroon and Gold Rooms '44ChemEng, Robert Hugh Monahan '43MD, Henry N and the other colorful, Innovative Somsen, Jr. '32BA, '34llB, MISS Barbara Stuhler 'S2MA, accents that make It the place Milton I. Wick '18 you will want to bring your family, Term expl,.. 1975: George S. Ameson '49BEE, Charles friends and business acqualn- Bntzlus '33BCE '38MSCE, George Gibbs '63BSEd, leonard tances. There Is other news In C. Heisey '49BSB, Gen Mack Joseph '468A, Kenneth this Issue that Is also especially p, Manlck 'S68A '60BS '60MD. Richard F. MesSing for you, the alumnus. '43BChemE, Wallace E. SaJovlch 'SOBBA 'S6MHA Term exp"" 1976: Margaret Fenske Amason 'S4BSHE, Terrance Hanold '33lLB, John K. Hass '33llB, Jerry 3 Points Of View Helgeson 'SSBA, John I. Jacobson 'S4llB, Stephen Keallng '42lLB, Iantha Powrie LeVander '3SBSEd, Dr. Troy G. 6 The Fabulous New Alumni Club, High Atop RoIhns '4SMD, John G. Schutz '35, Thomas H Swain 42BBA. The Minneapolis Skyline, Will Open In PRESIDENTS REPRESENTING CONSTITUENT GROUPS September Patricia McFadden Partridge '43BS, Minnesota Alumnae Clu M, Julian Erlandson '43BS '47MS Colleges of Agnculture, Forestry & Home EconomiCS; Harold G. Haglund 'SOBBA 10 OAA And ASA Presentations, Special College of BUSIness Administration; Dr. Warren W. Citations Will Highlight June 5 MAA Hunt '61ODS, School of Dentistry; Dor,ald A. Event Sonsalla 'S5BS '62MA, College of Education; Dr. George W Janda '48MD, Medical Alumni ASSOCiation; Patrick O'Halloran '60AMS, Mortuary Science; Onalee Fanslow O'Hearn '46GN, 16 An Alumni Tour Is A Special Way To Travel School of Nursing; James J. Remes '56BSPhm, College of Pharmacy; Alfred E, France '49BA, College of liberal Arts 21 Minnesota Women: Marilyn McCrudden & UlliverSlty College; Norman C. Silver '42METE, Institute of Technology; Dr. John L Walch 'saBA '63DVM, Thorson (Linn Mason) Veterinary Medical Alumni Associarlon: Ms. Betty Danielson 438A '53MSW, School of Social Wort(: Ardis Tyndall Nelson 23 Dave Shama's Gopher Tales '47GDH, Dental Hygiene Alumnae ASsociation; Richard Hytlested 'S7M '68BS, General College; Mrs. Sandra J. Carter 26 Minnesota People: Paul Cunningham 'saBS, Division of Medical Technology; Charles B. Holmes 'saBA, School of Journalism & Mass Communication. 27 MAA Constituent News PRESIDENTS, REPRESENTING NON-CONSTITUENT GROUPS 31 The University Greer E,lockhart '51 BSl'53llB, law Alumni AssociatIOn; Donald C. Benson 'SOSLA, "M" Club.

PAST PRESIDENTS COMMITTEE Russell E. Backstrom '2SBME '27MSME, Wiltiam F, Braasch 'OOBS '03MD, Victor Chrlstgau '24BSAg, FrankMn D. Gray'25BA Waldo E. Hardell '26BSB, Albert H, Heimbach '42BBA, Harry Mary lou Aurell '62BAJourn .' ...... Editor Heitzer '33METE. Hibbert M. Hill '23BCE. Arthur A. Hustad Edwin L. Haislet '31BS '33MA '37EdD ., ...... Managing Editor '16BA, Oscar R. Knutson '27LLB. Francis A. Lund '31-'35, Vergal Buescher .,' ...... Cover and Consultant Artist Virgil J. P. lundquist '43MD. Joseph Maun '328A '35LLB. Harvey Nelson '228S '25MD. Charles Judd Ringer '38-'41, Second class postage paid at SI. Paul, Minnesota, and at additional Glenn E, Seidel'38ME, James f. .. Watson '42BA, Edwin A. Wilson mailing offices, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. '3OBEE, WellsJ. Wright '36BSL '36LLB, Edgar F. Zelle '138A, Published monthly, from September through June. by the Min­ nesota Alumni Association. 2610 University Avenue, SI. Paul, Mm­ HONORARY LIFE ASSOCIATION MEMBERS nesota 55114; telephone (612) 373-2466. Member of the American Dr, J. l. Morrill, President Emeritus of the Unviersity; Alumni Council. William T. Middlebrook, Vice President Emeritus of the Annual Alumni Association membership of $10.00 includes a sub­ University; Dr. O. Meredith Wilson; Gerald T. Mullin; William scription to The Alumni News. Special corporate and business sub­ l. Nunn, William B. Lockhart. scriptions available for $5,00 yearly. The Fabul u e Alumni Club, Hi h Atop Th inne oli kylin , ill Op n In ept b r

H IGH ATOP appointed Board, and Maroon the IDS Tower in downtown and G ld Room, to the add i- Minneapolis will be located one ti nal tyli h facilitie that are of the mo t exciting, elegant nd important part of thi lub' comfortable club in the nation. great ervi e. That Club , the new Alumni The Ski- -Mah Lounge ha Club which will open thi S p- a no k to 'uit any mood of it tember on the 50th ft or of the alumni patrons. A large fire- IDS Tower, i di tinctly y ur plac , varied wood-paneled Club. all , bla t of u r graphic The new Alumni Club ha d lue-green plu h carpeting been de igned pecific By for it et the tage for three di tinct member hip - you, th alumni lounge area contained in one. of the University of inne ota . omfort ble eluded booth It i a Club where y u will are a ail able along the interior proud to bring your family, y ur all f the ki- -Mah Lunge. friend and your bu ine If your mo d i light-hearted acquaintance becau e it you may ch e the canopied, vice will be graciou ,it ur- wo d- Roored, pean u t . and rounding mart and it facilitie ebony of a collegiate like 1 un e complete and available f r any area. Or ou m ay choo e the of your needs, be they for bu i- a u I comfort of a loung y nes or for pleasure. hai r nd I table. The location of the A lumni For dining mo t lumni lub Club on the top flo or of th p tron will know the quiet ele- impre ive IDS Tow r s tin th gance of the Regent Room, center of dow n~own Min- although a bu fft t or andwich neapolis offers the lub mem- bar will be vailable during ber and his gue t a panorama lun heon hour in the \U- through glas wall of the ur- U-Mah Lounge. rounding metropolitan area, the The Regent Room, with it waterway that lace it and the al1-g1a p riphy, ill be pattern of living that mark it a cented with myri d of col- that can only be called sen a- or : th red and black of it car- tional. pet, stained glass panel , col- The Club' interior i an umn of smoked gla , marty accent to it periphery of glass uphol t red chair, plu hy- and vi ual timl.llati n - from colored draperie and the imple the excitement of the Ski- elegance of its dining accouter- U-Mah Lounge to the comfort- ments. he Regent Room, able elegance of the Regents which will at approximately Dining Room, to the smartly___ 2_ 00_ pe.r on, 10 fe_a_tu_re__ in_ t_er_-__-=- ______-

6 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY THE REGENTS ROOM, the = major dmmg area of the new Alumni Club, epitomizes soft­ spoken elegance with its swirl of plush coJors in draperies, carpeting and furnishings, and the feelings produced by varied wood panelings, stained glass panels and smokey glass columns offset against the peilpheal glass wall and the moods of the metropolitan area seen through it.

Ihr ugh the new Alumni Club, both re ideot and nonre Ideot, as initiation fee i wai ed, and hi the ubtJe, cu tomized lounge well a all Minne ota Alumni or her annual due are $10.00. area with c mfortable furniture A ociation member, and Re ident member are tho e making it a plea ure to it and faculty and admini trati e mem­ accepted for member hip in the wait, the wo d-paneled cor­ ber f the Uoi er it} of Min­ Club who live or do the majority rid r , the Uoi er ity di play ne ota ill recei e mailing of their bu ine in Hennepin, and ariety of painting accent­ in iting them to become Club Ram e , Dakota, Wa hington, tog public area , the bJa t of member before the facilit Scott, Car er and Anoka upergraphic , the martne open in eptember. countie. on-re ident members and p tular vie in e en the Membership in the Club will are tho e ho Ii e or do the mo t per nal fa ilitie - all of be re tricted to 2,000 member, majorit of their bu ine the e mirror the mood of the and, ince 00 Mione ota el ewhere than in the abo e alumni wh will make up the alumni ha e maintained their mentioned Minne ota countie , member hip of a lub et in the membership in the Club after or who re ide out of the tate. multi-mooded gla reflection it 10 ed it facilitie in the After September 1, 1973, and p norarn ic view heraton-Ritz Hotel, onl 1 ,200 Charter member hip in new member hip will b a ailable in Club will not be a ailable, and the n Club. regular annual due and initia­ M EMBER HIP 1 THE Tho e indi idual who tion fee will be in effe 1. For of Minn ta be orne member pri r to the Re ident member the e in lude open to lub opening ill b on idered a 30.00 initiation fee and are member - harter member . F r the Re i­ 120.00 annual due; for the of the Min­ dent harter member, the initia­ on-re ident member, a 13.00 iation, ti n fee of 30.00 i wai ed and initiation fe and 12.00 annual hi r h r annual due ill be du 100.00; f r the N n-re ident If ou are intere ted in mem­ orwh , be harter member, the 13.00 ber hip in the new lumni and ther ClUb, we ugge t that 'ou ub­ Uni er it mit our appli ati nan ou re ei e it. D n tend he k t the lumni Offi Durin the m t nn r lumni

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 7 J

USE THIS FLOOR PLAN of the new Alumni Club, occupying nearly half of the 50th floor of the IDS Tower, to discover what has been planned for the Club 's Interior, with you in mind.

8 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY THE SKI-U-MAH LOUNGE is actually three lounges in one where you can choose an area to SUIt your mood, from the privacy of plush, comfort­ able booths, to the gaily canopied, collegian at­ mosphere of a peanuts and ebony lounge, to the quiet elegance of a loungey chair and low table overlooking the panorama of the metropolitan area.

without an application. If ou do 1971 becau e of difficultie with U Regents appoint nor receive an Alumni Club the hotel' management. CLA associate dean member hip mailing carrying But the need for an Alumni rhe application blank, call the Club per i ted and 0 did the A new a ociate dean for the Alumni Office (373-2466) and work of the A ociation in find­ ocial cience in the College of we will end you an application. ing the be t location with the Liberal Arts has been named by the be t ervice and facilitie for Univer ity Board of Regents. u h a club. John Howe, 37 . as ociate profe - The placement of the new or of hi tory. will ucceed John Alumni Club on the 50th floor Webb. who e four-year tenn as EW ALUMNI CLUB THE of the fabulou IDS To er in a ociate dean e pire June 30. in the fabu lou IDS Tower the heart of downtown Min­ Webb will take a abbatical lea e bring t fruiti n plan for uch neapolis i the fulfillment of all from the fa ulty during the coming an alumni fa ility that originated academic year. alumni dream for the perfect in 1954. Eight year later the Howe, who b been a member Alumni Club . The Club' loca­ Minne ota Alumni A ociation of the Mione ota faculty in e tion i fanta tic, it interior Executive committee authorized 1965. i currentl) er ing a de igned in an e citing. com­ as i tant chainnan of the hi tory the A 0 iation' E ecuti e fortable fa ilion with our - it Director Ed Hai let to urvey department: he h been director of alumni member - enjo ment undergraduate tudie (1967 -6 and the A ociation member hip in and edification in mind, and 1969-70) and director of graduate the metropolitan area a to their parking i plentiful. tudie 1970-71) for that depart­ intere t in uch a facility and th The new Alumni Club i ment. kind of club the might like to de tined to become the club of He i the author of two book • have. Thi ur ey revealed that the Twin itie area. Wh not The Chan ing Political Thought of alu mni wanted and would up­ John Adams (Princeton niversity be orne a Charter member to port an alumni club located Pre , 1966) and From the Revolu­ in ure our place on the Club' away from the Uni er ity. tion Through the A e of Jackson: r ter? N gotiation en ued with a Innocence and Empire in rhe Young number of hotel and club Republic (Prenti e Hall. 1973). operator , and finally, in p­ Howe h a ba hel r' degree from Otterbein College, a doctor of tember 19, 1963, the Alumni philo oph degree from Yale Club pen d in the Sheraton­ Uni er it , and ha recei ed Ritz Hotel in Minneapoli . Thi W odro Wil n 19 -59) and Club operated uc e full f r J .S. Guggenheim Fello\\ hip eight y ar • until it clo ed in (1971-7~).

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 9 I accept with pleasure the invitation to attend on June 5, the 24th Alumni Honors Dinner and 69th Annual Meeting of the To: The Board of Directors, Mem bership. I will need ___ tickets. (Tickets are $6.50 each.) The Minnesota Alumni Name Association, Address ______2610 University Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota 55114. Guest's Name Check enclosed in amount of Reservations must be received by June 1 at lat est. ------10 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 24th Alumni Honors Presentation & 69th Annual Meeting

OAA AND ASA PRESENTATIONS, SPECIAL CIT ATIONS WILL HIGHLIGHT JUNE 5 MAA EVENT

SEVEN DISTINGUISHED ored for their dedication to and Mutual, his activities have encom­ University of Minnesota alumni, efforts in behalf of the work of the passed the entire investment opera­ who have become noted for their alumni of the University of Min­ tion , from mortgage loans to cor­ co ntributions to their profe ion ne ota are Violet Rosacker Graf porate aod municipal bonds and and to the University, will be hon­ '33-'37, Faribault, Minne ota, preferred and common stocks. He ored at the June 5 Alumni Honors former Minnesota Alumni Associa­ is still active as a member of Min­ Dinner & Annual Meeting of the tion board member and secretary of nesota Mutual's inventment com­ Membership of the Minnesota that board; and James C . Harris mittee. Alumni As ociation at the Radis­ '47MBA Minneapolis, executive All during his long period of ser­ son South Hotel. vice president and director of the vice to his company, Briese ha Five of the e alumni will receive Northwestern National Bank, who participated in leadership capa iries the University's Out tanding has given outstanding service as a in a variety of professional organi­ Achievement Award, the highe t member of the A sociation' zations and trade groups associated honor that the University of Min­ In estrnent committee. with the economy of the Midwest nesota can confer on its graduates and the nation . He has also con­ for their contributions to their pro­ tributed to the welfare of his com­ fe sions and the con equent distinc­ F RANKLIN BRIESE munity through numerous civic and tion they lend to the institution from began hi bu ine s career in legal charitable affiliation , among which which they graduated. Those re­ work with The Minnesota Mutual he erved as a member of the Min­ ceiving the Outstanding Achieve­ Life In urance Company, St. Paul, nesota Governor's State Investment ment Award include Franklin immediately after his graduation Board Advisory committee as a Brie e '28LLB, St. Paul, chairman form the Univer ity of Minne ota tru tee and former member of the of the board and of the executive CoUege of Law in 1928 . He has Charles T . Miller Ho pital execu­ committee of The Minne ota worked continuou ly for that com­ tive committee, and a a director Mutual Life Insurance Company; pany until the pre ent time. and former officer of the Greater St. Mom C. Hursh '28BA '30LLB, Almo t three years after he Paul United Fund & Council, St. Paul, retired commis ioner of joined Minne ota Mutual, Brie e Chamber of Commerce and The public welfare for the State of Min­ moved to the inventment depar­ Bush Foundation. nesota; Donald P. Kircher '39BA. tment; he later became as i tant Brie e is also a former member New York. pre ident and chairman treasurer, treasurer ice president of the board and e ecuti e commit­ of the board of The Singer Com­ and treasurer. He was elected to the tee and a past treasurer of the Min­ pany; Sigurd A . Sjoberg board of trustees in 1958, named nesota Alumni A ociation. '42 BSAeroEng , Seabrook, Texa , a vice pre ident a year later! then The first non-mortgage banker to deputy director, National Aeronau­ executi e ice president­ recei e the Di tingui hed Ser ice tic & Space Admini tration Lyn­ inve tment . until he became presi­ Award of the Mortgage Bankers don B. Johnson Space Center, dent and chairman of the executive Association in 1970, he al 0 counts HOll ton; and Maurice E. Stan by committee in 1966, and chainnan among hi awards membership in '30BChem 33MS Seattle, of the board and pre ident of Min­ the Mortgage Bankers Legion, the Wa hington, director of the ne ota Mutual in 1968 . He as.sumed 1968 Boss of the Year A ward of Environrn ntal Conser ation divi­ the po ition he currently hold in the St. Paul Chapter of the National sion, Northwe t Fi heries Center, 1970. Secretarie As ociation, a well National Marine Fisheries S rvice. During the 45 year that Briese the 1968 Bo of the Year Award The two alumni who will be hon- ha been associated with Minnesota of the St. Paul Jaycee .

ALUMNI NEWS,1973 MAY 11 Franklin Briese Morris Hursh Donald Kircher

Briese and hi s wife, Dorothy director of the Wi con in Welfare the Year Award (1967), the olun­ Vine, have two children and IX Council. teer of America (Minne ota chap­ grandchildren. Ten years later, in January of ter) Humanitarian, AdmlnJ trator, 1955, he wa appointed the tate Public ervant Award (1971), the Commi ioner of Public Welfare t. Paul KiwaDi Club' Public MORRIS C. HURSH by Governor Orville Freeman . He ervice Recognition ward (1971), retired on December 31, 1971, as held this posi tion continuou ly , the American Public Welfare commi sioner of the Minnesota until his retirement, erving under ociatlon' Howard L . Ru ell Department of Public Welfare, a five governor. Hur h continue to Di tingui hed ervice ward po ition he had held for 17 year . erve the State a a con ultant on (1971), the Mlnne ota Ho pltal When he terminated hi 40-year welfare problem . oeiation' Public er Ice career in public ervice, he ended During these years of inten e Award (1971 , and the HenneplO a di tinctive career that had been local re pon ibility, Hur h worked ounty mmunity He Ith & Wel- almost totally pent in Minnesota, with numerou tate, regional and fare Council' Di tingul hed er­ except for a 10-year period from national a ociation , hi appoint­ ice ward (1972). 1945-1955 when he was employed ments and election a te tirnony to Hur h and hi wife, Bernice, by the State of Wisconsin. the tature he had acquired in hi have four children, three on and After his graduation from the field. Nationally, he wa active on a daughter. University's College of Law in the executive board of the Ameri­ 1930, Hursh worked for the State can Public Welfare A ociation, on of Minnesota in several administra­ the executive committee of the DONALD P . KIRCHER tive capacities. He became execu­ Council of State Welfare Admini - graduated from olumbia Univer- tive ecretary to newly-elected trators, on the executive board of ity ' Law hool in 1939, follow- Minnesota Governor Floyd B . the National A ociation of ocial ing attendance at the Univer ity of 01 on in 1931 , and remained in that Welfare, and on the National Minne ota. After hi graduation, he position for eight year, erving Advi ory Committee for Adult joined the New York City firm of under three governor . He worked Basic Education. The latter Winthrop, tim on, Putnam & with the state's divi ion of social appointment was made by fonner Robert where he practiced law welfare (the forerunner of the pre­ Pre ident Lyndon John on in 1967 . until the end of 1941 . During thi sent department of public welfare) Hursh ha received numerou period he worked extensively on the from 1939 until 1945 , a a legal awards and honors during hi year reorganization of MeKe on & consultant and in various other of public ervice, enhancing hi Robbin , erving a coun el for the capacities. helping image of public welfare and tru tee who had a court appoint­ In the fall of 1945 Hursh became ocial work generally. Among ment to upervi e the drug firm ' the executive director of the Wi - these award are the Minnesota re rganization following di clo ure consin Lutheran Welfare Society, chapter of the National A 0 iation of frauds by it former pre ident. and, three years later, became of Social Worker Social Worker of Kircher enli ted in the .5.

12 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY Sigurd Sjoberg Maurice Stansby

Army a PrJ ate right after Pearl officer of The Singer Company in Harbor and a comml ioned in 195 , and , 10 year later, a the cavalry 10 Augu t 1942 . He gi en the additional dutie of chair­ team on its inception and was later . er ed over e for 21 month ,par­ man of the board of directors . as igned the re pon ibili for plan­ tl Ipatmg in campaign in Nor­ In addition to hi work as a direc­ ning the conduct of the Apollo mandy, Brittany, Northea tern tor of numerou national corpora­ moon landing mi ion . France, Belgium and Germany . A tion , he erve a a tru tee of the Hi ASA work took him from tank commander, Kircher wa U .S . Council of the International Langley Re earch Center in 1959 wounded twi e and wa awarded Chamber of Commerce and the Ta hen he as head of the Airborne the liver tar for Gallantry in Foundation, a a member of the Sy tern Analy i Se tion, to the ction on three eparate occa ion . atlOnal Bu me Council for Con- ASA Space Task Group in Ham­ He wa al awarded the Bronze umer Affair . Acti e in a number pton here he was operation coor­ Star, the Purple Heart with Clu ter, of other bu ine and charitable dinator of the Flight Operation the Belgian roi de Guerre with organization . Kircher wa the di i ion , to the ASA Lyndon B . Palm, the Pre idential Unit ita­ re ipient of the 1967 Gold Medal John on Space Center in Hou ton , tion and w made a Chevalier of of A hie ement of the Poor Te as, as i tant to the chief of the Order of Leopold by the Bel­ Ri hard Club of Philadelphia, and, the Flight Operation di i ion . gian go emment. in 1969, as cho en to deli er the Sjoberg pro ided the techni al After leaving the ervice with the annual lecture erie pon ored and managerial direction for the rank of captain in 1945, Kircher jointl by the McKin e Founda­ de ign, de elopment and re umed hi law practi e with Ii n ~ r Management Re ear h and implementation of the Mi ion Winthrop, tim on, Putnam & the olumbia niver ity Graduate Control enter in Hou ton, Te Robert , Much of hi work a ch I of Bu ine which ha upported both the IOvolved with the legal problem of Gemini and Apollo pa e flight The inger ompany, whi h he w roi ion . In pril 1970, a dire tor a ked to join in 194 . t that time of Flight Operation at the pa e he wa pia ed in charge of labor ith the ational Center, joberg be arne re pon i­ relation p Ii Y matter . Later he eronatui & pa e dmini tra­ ble for dire ting the entire flight would handle a ariety f matter A) began nearl I year upport comple for the ucce ful invol ing nearly e ery phase of the ag when, a an aeronautical re cue ef~ rt of the polio 13 flight c mpan' bu ine as i tant to engineer, he a engaged in crew . the pre iden!. re earch on the handling qllalitie , In 1971 he led the preparation for Kircher be anl a ice pre ident t bility and ontrol of airplane at the u ce ful poll 14 roi i n . 10 1952, wa ele ted t th ard Langley Re ear h Center j berg' leader hip and techni­ of dire tor in 1954, wa ele ted in Hampton . irginia . He wa cal ability led t hi January 1971 pre ident and hief e ecuti e tran ferred to the Proje t Mercury app intrnent a deputy dire t r f

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 13 the NASA Lyndon B. John on count the development of a proce­ ntinued her work with the Space Center (formerly the NASA dure for determining volatile ba e ciation, bec ming active in the Manned Spacecraft Center), where in fi h; the improvement of a lumnae lub, the women' con- he ha associate re pon ibility for method for the determination of oil tituent group of the MAA . Mr . overall management and direction in fi h meal; and the advan ement raf erved on the Alumnae lub of all Center programs, function of ignificant knowledge on polyun- board from 1965-68 and as the and re ource . He is currently aturated fatty acids in fi h ii, group'~ pre ident from 1967-68. involved in the development of the particularly in relati n to it hole­ Her effective leader hip during the Space Shuttle program. terol depre ant propertie and formative year of the lub s Sjoberg's award and honor everal metaboli dise e in man. cholar hip Tea a ured that pro­ atte t to his leadership and profe - Stan by. who ha trained and gram' growth and ucce . ional capabilitie . In 1966 he erved a con ultant to re earcher Mr . Graf erved a an elected received the NASA Manned and admini trator ,ha an inci ive member of the Minnesota Alumni Spacecraft Center Superior mind and the fore ight that ha A ociation' board of director Achievement Award for hi work timulated many who now hold from 1967 until 1972. From 1971 - with the Gemini program; in 1969, re pon ible po ition in government 72 he wa the board' ecretary . the NASA Exceptional ervice and indu try . She has al 0 erved the A ocla­ Medal twice, one of the two highe t During hi nearly 30 year a tion on numerou committee, m­ NASA medals, first for hi con­ director of the U .S. Fish & Wildlife eluding Homecoming, Teller :'!ld tribution to Apollo 8 and later for Service' Seattle Fi hery Nominations. hi efforts on behalf of Apollo 11; Technological Laboratory, he ha Since the Graf have moved to in L970, the NASA Manned built the laboratory from an obscure Faribault, Minne ota in 1970, Spacecraft Center Certificate of facility engaged in relatively Mr . Graf h been ecretary of the Commendation, the Center' high­ routine inve tigation into one with Minne ota Alumni A oClatlon' e t award, for hi leader hip and an international reputation in the chapter there. direction in the Apollo 13 program; performance of pecialized and Vi Graf i a complete OJ erley aloin 1970, the Pre identiaL ophi ticated re earch . In 1966 of Mmne ota parti an - he bUllg Medal of Freedom wa accepted Stan by received the highe t honor great enthu ia m and energy to any from President Richard Nixon by that the U.S. Department of job he take on for the nlver ley Sjoberg on behalf of the Apollo 13 Interior can give, it Di tingui hed or the A lallon. Mi ion Operations Team; in 1971, ervice Award. he al 0 work for her oroney . NASA's highe t award, it Di tin­ During L971 , Stanby' Pioneer Alpha Gamma Delta. and ha gui hed Service Medal, for hi Re earch Laboratory wa incor­ served that organization pre i­ work with the Apollo 13 re cue porated a a unit within the newly dent of the Hue A ociatJon. a effort; and, in 1972, an honorary organized North Pacific Fi hery a member of the Building Finance doctor of cience degree from Re earch Center, and hi re earch committee :md a an undergraduate DePauw University, Greenca tie, efforts were channeled from food finan ial advl r. Indiana. science into work involving the Mr . Graf h been tive WIth Sjoberg and hi wife, Elizabeth effect of contaminant in the envi­ the Faribault and Mlfineapoh Ludwig, have three ons. ronment upon aquatic organi m . League of Women ote , ervmg Hi leader hip in this area give the latter gr up a a unit chamnan promi e of important breakthrough and a a member of the finance MAURlCE E. STANSBY, in orne of the many problem area committee. an internationally-recognized of this ecological re earch. ide from her work with the authority on re earch in the field Stan by, who al 0 erve a coor­ Univer ity and it alumni, perhap of chemi try and the utilization of dinator for a ll enter re earch no ther intere t ha con umed her fi hand fi hery product , ha which deal with effect of environ­ more than the American Field er­ authored two widely-used reference mental change upon aquatic organ­ vice ince her daughter went to book, Industrial Fishery i m , entered the federal service a Gree e a an AFS tudent in 1957. Technology and Fish Oils. Hi a chemi t in 1931. ince that time Mr . Graf has been written contributions also incLude an AF area repre entati e and about L30 works found in encyc­ re p n ible for AFS a tivitie and lopaedias, chapters in book, a VIOLET ROSA KER GRAF the c rdination of them in the four well a research papers in American ha had a long and constant intere t chool that made up her Min­ and foreign journals. He wa in tru­ in the Univer ity of Minne ta dat­ neap Ii di tri t. mental in the development of Com­ i ng back to her student days. A teady (ream of foreigntu­ mercial Fisheries Abstracts, wh ich Because he i interested in helping dent have hared the Graf ' home is used world-wide for information tudent, Mr . Graf became the and family a tivitie , and, ~ r many on the technical progre of Minne ota Alumni A sociati n' years, on or two vi iting Fulbright fisheries. repre entative on the Univer ity cholar have been entertained f r Among his pre tigeou profe­ Scholar hip committee from 1961 two week by the Graf family. Her sional contributions, Stan by can to 1964. move to Faribault only e tended 14 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY Violet Rosacker Graf James Harris

her AFS activitie to the AFS in the inve tment work that he alway that town . completes, have been invaluable to Mr . Graf al 0 erved during the Association . 1970-72 as vice pre ident of the The executive vice president and T HE JUNE 5 Faribault State Ho pital Auxiliary . a director of the orthwestern Annual Meeting of the Member­ She and her husband, Richard, National Bank of Minneapolis, ship of the Minne ota Alumni have three daughter and a son. Harris has been with the bank ince As ociation & The Alumni Honor 1947. He was elected an as istant Dinner at the Radisson South Hotel trust officer in 1955, named will begin with a reception and J MES C. HARRIS a i tant vice president in 1955, social hour in the Garden Court at has given out tanding ervice to the vice pre ident in 1957, enior vice 5:30 p.m. Dinner will be served in Minne ota Alumni A ceiation as president and administratjve trust the Great Hall West at 7:00 p.m. a member of its lnvestment com­ officer in 1966, and enior vice Reservations for the e ent, at $6.50 mittee for 17 years (since 1956), pre ident and executive tru t officer per person, should be made by June and as chairman of that committee in 1967. He was named to his cur­ 1 as space i limited. for 10 year since 1963). ren t posts in 1968. Plea e contact the Minne ota The Investment committee is a A Minneapolis nati e, he ent Alumni A ociatjon University of particularly important arm of the to public chool in LeSueur, Min­ Minnesota, 2610 Univer ity A sociation, functioning to invest ne ota. received a bachelor's Avenue, St. Paul, Minne ota and reinvest the life member hip degree from Macale ter College, 55114, telephone (612) 373-.. 466, fund of the organization. Although St. Paul, in 1942. and an MBA to make your reservations. the committee operates under a degree from the Uni ersity of Min­ board policy that e tabli he nesota in 1947 . perimeters on it investment of Harri i a director of the E. F. tocks and bonds, it mu t, for the John on Company, Waseca, Min­ mo t part, decide it own cour e of ne ota, the Abbott-Northwe tern action. Harris' effective leader hip Ho pital and Opportunity of thi committee has been re pon­ Work hop. H is a vice president sible for the strong guidance of the and director of the Blandin Paper MAA inve tment program and it Company, Grand Rapid , Min­ regular growth. nesota, and a tru tee of the Blandin Harris is not only fully in charg Foundation. of the details of the committe's The Harrise have one daughter, quarterly meeting . but the careful Margaret Su an. and knowledgeable input that he brings to these meetings, a well a ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 15 An alumni tour is a special way to travel . ..

. . . particularly if its on a Minnesota marked by excellent food and bever­ way we would also catch glimpses of Alumni Association tour. We joined an age service and good company. vast expanses of the ocean made MAA Tour recently that we would like From Faro the Minnesota tour group spectacular in the setting sun, and the to share with you . traveled in airy buses through the col­ breathtakingly tall and COlorful rock for­ Early Saturday morning, March 24, orful Algarve countryside, passing lush mations that guard the Algarve's coast 179 individuals boarded a Pan Ameri­ growths of lemons, oranges, almonds, Our buses stopped at the luxurious can charter flight to Portugal's maritime olives, figs and giant geraniums, and Hotel Alvor Praia, set atop a rocky province, the Algarve, often called the gleaming wide-washed homes of landscaped crest overlooking the "The Garden of Portugal". The plane the Portuguese appearing almost Atlantic Ocean and a vast expanse of touched down in Faro, the capital of magical in the soft twilight. Along the beaches. This pleasantly elegant hotel the Algarve, thousands of miles later, would be our tour headquarters for the on Saturday evening after a flight next seven days . And a fantastic head-

18 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY quarters it was - from its variety of ing vii/ages. The ancient port city of dining areas whose personnel served Lagos and bustling fishing port of relaxed meals, to its rooms with patios Portimao were a short ride from the overlooking warm golden beaches, to hotel where we would shop and ex­ the beauty of Its interior and the gar­ plore. dens and lawns surrounding it, to its multi-faceted facilities, including an The Moorish countrysIde of the Olympic-sized heated swimming pool, Algarve was filled with the contrasts of tennis courts and sauna. a country that had known foreign Minnesota tour members spent long, invaders from around the world. A relaxing hours walking the broad short drive from the hotel took us to hill­ beaches near the hotel, looking for sides filled with vineyards and orange shells, exploring rocky grottos or the nearby picturesque Portuguese fish-

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 17 and lemon orchards; we passed an old Tagus there was a large sculptured shepherd guiding his sheep alongside ship's prow, symbolizing the brave the panorama of the ocean and drove Portuguese explorers who discovered into fishing villages where narrow so much of the new world. We motored winding streets were used both by to the chic resort town of Estoril and donkey and by car. Gascals, hideaway of numerous deposed European royalty, where we An optional two-day motor trip to Us­ lunched. Later we went to Sintra, one bon, the uniquely beautiful capital of of Portugal's oldest and loveliest Portugal, was available to members of towns, perched on a hillside, where we the tour. Those of us who took that saw an old Moori:!ih castle high on a interesting busride into the interior of hill. In the evening our tour group the country again saw contrasts of a nation marked by its conquerors . In the famous Lisbon harbor on the River

18 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY enjoyed a sumptuous dinner at the of an old iron elevator built by the same Hotel Ritz, where we spent a luxurious man who did the Eiffel Tower of Paris, nigh t. The following day we toured Us­ for lunch . bon, and its National Coach Museum, Jero nimos Monastery and other sights Another sidetrip available to tour before traveling to the Restaurante A members included a day's bus ride up QUinta, in the center of Usbon on top the Golden Coast of Portugal, and a visit to Lagos, Sagres, a rocky promon­ tory jutting into the Atlantic Ocean that is the extreme southwestern corner of Europe, and to Prince Henry's for­ tressed Navigation School which has become a youth hostel. Here we also saw a huge stone compass dial that Prince Henry is supposed to have used in his naval studies . Three miles away from Sagres we visited Cape St. Vin­ cent which to the ancient world was On our way back to the Hotel we Our stay in Portugal was over too its last explored point. Today a light­ stopped to watch some fisherman sell quickly, but the memories of its colors , house stands there, sentinel against their day's catch on a beach outside its happy people and its sounds would the pounding surf below. of Sagres . stay with us for a long while .

20 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY Inn•

A NEWLY-REVIVED dramatic form, an exceptionally versatile co tume and the talent to playa variety of characters are the ingredient for Marilyn McCrudden Thor on's uccess­ fulone-woman how, The American Woman. The how pre ents a history of the American woman through a serie of character sketches - the Southern belle, the film tar, the Iri h immigrant and the club woman - and portrays her cares and concern through the last 100 year . " Women have changed in the last I ()() years and they ~ee m to be quite different," observed Mrs. Thorson '5 1BA, ho perform under her tage name, Linn Ma on. " But they are ba ically the same, too . Each has a trong determination to get what she wants, whether it' enough food to feed her family or the most uitors in her town." Linn Mason remains on tage for the entire perform­ ance, even during costume changes . Her basic co - tume, a black Lame, ankle-length dre s designed by Rudy Gernreich, turn ty Ii h or tacky, tailored or frilly, a he change acce orie. A black wool hawl 0 er her head and houlder creates the Iri h immigrant, while a white blazer and a head carf tran form the flapper of the '20 into an a piring tarlet of the '30 . For a dramatic effect all Mi s Mason's accessorie are either black or white. A mall steamer trunk holds all the e acce orie when tain adaptation of material done by Ruth Draper and she travel and while he perform . On tage Mi ele tioo from author Teone see William , Phylli Ma on u e the trunk a a prop and al 0 take from McGinley and 0 car Wilde, Mis Mason' show doe it the acces orie as he need them during the ho . not follow any original prepared cript. Con equently, Thi way she can switch characters and costumes on he i able to vary the length of her presentation from tage without closing the curtain or blacking out the per­ one hour for tour appearances to over two hour for formances area . orne of the theatre performance be has gi en in ew Theatrical monologue ha fa cinated Mi Ma 00 York. ince he wa in high ch 01. PopuLarized in the early The characters Linn Mason pre eots are drawn from 20th century by Ruth Draper and melia Oti kinner, women he has known in her lifetime or from fa orite thi theatrical tyle wa relati ely unfamiliar to meri­ literary chara tefS . She ba ed her portrayal of the Iri h can audience until Hal H Ibrook pre entedAII Evenillg immigrant on the personalit of an aunt, hi Ie he with Mark Twain in 1966 . created the Southern belle from Scarlett O' Hara of Gone Mi s Mason devel p d th idea of a how featuring With the Wind. Each of her chara ters repre ents about the Ameri an woman while she toured with the Theatre 10 year of American hi tory, and all reflect the change Guild' Broadway production of The J ayward Stock. and on tants in the life of the Ameri all woman thr ugh he researched the Ii es and mat rial of former female the year. Women' lib. the '60 , the roaring' 0 , Hol­ m nol guists - or dis u e - befor developing her I wood - all are in luded in Linn Mason's dramatiza­ wn pre entation. lthough The Ameri an Woman on- ti n.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 21 Her characters have been entertaining audience in New York and around the country for five years. While Mi s Ma on ha been performing at college , club , theatres and private gathering , he ha found variety and profe ional ati faction in her work. "The ame role on Broadway, night after night, can be boring - and certainly con tricting. In my how I can play the parts I've alway wanted to do and there are enough part to give me variety each time I per­ form." Not only do her role vary within each performance, but each appearance can take place in a different etting every night if he wi he . New York remain Mi Ma on' home, but her engagement take her around the country. In New York she has appeared at the Plaza Hotel, the Jan Hu Playhou e and the Lincoln Center for the Performing Art . She has pre ented her how, originally named A Century of Portrait, for private group uch a at the author party for Liz Carpenter Charles S. Hoyt. co-chairman of the Class of 1923 when Rufflles and Flourishes was publi hed, at a party Golden Anniversary Reunion committee, recalled for Henry Fowler, former ecretary of the Treasury, and some memories of his University days recently at a gathering of writer for The ew York Times and Among them where his work as busmess manager The New York Post. of "The Minnesota Daily" that stabiltzed a flounder­ Her two on , age 10 and 6, travel with her occasion­ ing student newspaper with a yearly budget from ally since none of her tour last more than a few day . student fees gained through the University's Board Her hu band, Robert Thor on who i an architect in of Regents; the Junior Prom that actually made New York and al 0 a Minne ota graduate, encourage money; Dean NiCholson's secret student commIt­ her career. tee that helped him resolve campus problems; life "He' intere ted in what I do and I am intere ted at the fraternity houses; and the pollllCS of a grow­ ing metropolitan campus . in what he does. It ha worked out well," Mr . Thor on Hoyt. a retired Honeywell manager of systems said. and procedure. spends much of his time today "It may be a per onal thing with me, but I told my working with young people and traveling. He has husband that he mu t promi e that I could work in the been instrumental in the success of Mmneapolts' theatre after our marriage," he explained. "I didn't Nicollet-Loring Center that helps youngsters before want to ju t sit. He said, 'Of cour e, make money at they become criminals. it, too.' " He would like to share today's as well as yester­ Touring ha been a part of Linn Mason's theatrical day's memories with you at the Class of 1923 Gol­ life from her amateur day through her year in college den Anniversary Reunion . Won't you jom hIm? and into her professional life. After eeing her fir t theat­ rical monologue performance, Mis Ma on began taking CLASS OF 1923 PLANS ALL·DA Y Ie on and, by age 14, he performed monologues in GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION her hometown, Fort Wayne, Indiana. Eventually he FOR THURSDAY, JUNE 7 developed her own program and toured locally around Fort Wayne, performing at high chools and clubs. A Golden Anniversary Reu nion committee, Majoring in theatre at the Univer ity of Minne ota, headed by Class of 1923 members Charles Hoyt he spent her junior year in England tudying the Old and Catharine Coffman Knudtson, is firming up the Vic, the Stratford and the Drury Lane Theatres. Mr . plans for a very special reunion celebration on Thurs­ day, June 7. Thorson toured with the Univer ity' Bureau of oncert The Golden Anniversary day will begin with regis­ and Lectures production of She Stoops to Conquer the tration in CoHman Union on the University of Min­ summer after graduating cum laude from the Univer ity. nesota's Min neapolis campus, followed by a Golden She had her own radio, and later televi ion, how Anni versary luncheon hosted by the Minnesota in Minneapolis before she moved to New York with Alumni Associatio n, a Bu s Tour of the Universi ty her husband. campuses, Tea at University Preside nt Malcolm In New York she has done over 50 plays, on and Moos and Mrs. Moos' home, a nd a n evening ban­ off Broadway and in summer stock, and TV commer­ quet at the Town & Country Club in SI. Pa ul. cials, beside creating The American Woman. Class member and intern ational ci vil rights leader Roy Wilkins will be the eve ning banquet's featured speaker at whic h Fl ore nce Le hmann will serve as mistress of ceremonies. Watch for further news of the reunion a nd its per­ sona lities in future issues of The Alumni News.

22 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY The Gophers' four spring sport coaches, Santrock, Bolstad, Griak a and Siebert, are accustomed to snowstorms and freezing tempera­ tures during the early part of their spring seasons. The balmy, atypical weather of late March and early Apnl ~ ~w~ ~ ~illID~ ~ allowed the Gopher tennis, golf, track and baseball teams more out­ door time at an earlier date than at any time In recent memory. Now the spnng sport coaches might believe anything IS possible. g Minnesota's long winters and late oher lies spnngs have always handicapped refined In the South is lost. Thus, The Gophers have won four Big Gopher spnng sports teams, keep­ Gopher spnng sports have tradition­ Ten golf titles, in 1929, 1938, 1963 Ing them indoors for as long as three ally been slow starters, peaking in and 1972. Rve Gophers have won and one-half months some years. late Mayor early June. individual conference titles since Spring drills begin In January and The long shadow of winter is par­ 1938, including Jim Bergeson last practice always continues indoors tially responsible for the limited year. No Gopher golf team has ever until late March when all four squads number of outstanding Minnesota won the NCAA title. make trips into various parts of the spring sports athletes, and par­ Minnesota's grand moment in South for a week or longer. ticularly affects those participating in track came in 1948 when the These southern trips give the tennis and golf. Gophers won the NCAA champion­ Gophers an opportunity to play Except for baseball, the Gophers' ship. The Minnesota teams have but under conditions which can't be dup­ success In spring sports is nothing two Big Ten outdoor titles to their licated indoors. The coaches hail the to brag about. Minnesota has never credit since 1901 . southern treks as invaluable, but won a Big Ten tennis championship Baseball has been the Gophers often curse the Minnesota weather and the school has had just five Big most successful spring sport. Min­ when they return. Sometimes the Ten individual champions since nesota has won 10 Big Ten champ­ teams must return to indoor work­ 1910. Jim Ebbltl, a Canadian, won ionships and three national champi­ outs for a week or longer. Part of the title last year, the first Gopher onships. All the Big Ten titles and Ihe competitive edge and timing to do so since 1935. a majority of the NCAA crowns have come in the last two decades under coach Dick Siebert. The following is a look at how Min­ nesota's coaches approach four summertime sports in uncertain spring weather. Also included is a brief prospectus on each sport:

Ten nis Coach John Santrock will leave the University after this season to become a member of the University of Georgia psychology department. Santrock came to Minnesota a few years ago to work on his doctorate. He says he will miss college coach­ ing and Minneapolis, but has no regrets about leaving the Minnesota climate. " It's a fantastic handicap to ten­ nis," the West Virginia native said. "Every year we return from down South ready to go, but we always have to go back inside to play. Now, indoor tennis is fine, but the Big Ten matches are scheduled outdoors and conditions are always different. Even when we do get outside the are often in the 40's Carter OeLalt1re and the winds strong." The Gophers have three indoor Rick Ehrmanntraut courts at the new Bierman Athletic building and Santrock says they are

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 23 the equal of any indoor tennis clubs The Gophers are without experience Track in the Twin Cities. Indoor clubs are - they have only one senior - and Coach Roy Griak calls his track on the rise locally, and Santrock depth. The teams' number one team's annual trip to Louisiana a feels they will eventually raise the player is Carter DeLaittre of St. " savior". It affords the Gophers a calibre of Gopher tennis. Louis Park. Santrock says DeLaittre chance to compete against outstand· "The indoor clubs will allow more could be among the league's better ing teams as well as an opportunity youngsters to play the game the players. Bob Van Hoef, SI. Paul, is to condition outdoors. year round," Santrock said . " This the number two singles player and When the Gophers return from has never been possible here combines with DeLaittre to form an their southern trip they almost before. But it's a while down the road effective doubles team. always practice outdoors, regard­ before we'll see the results." less of the weather. " Bad weather The University gets few out­ doesn't limit us as much as some of-state tennis players. This year's other spring sports," Griak said. roster is made up of Minnesotans, Golf "We've got a newall-weather track most from the Twin Cities. Santrock Veteran golf coach Les Bolstad and that really helps. The cold and his predecessors have learned a long time ago to weather doesn't bother our guys too attempted to get outstanding out­ rationalize about the Minnesota of-state players, but they don't get weather rather than complain about much response when they explain it. " One has to adjust to his environ­ they have only one partial scholar­ ment," Bolstad says. ship to offer. " The weather hurts, The Gophers spend the winter too," Santrock said. " Try to get a months in the South Tower of Florida or California kid here." Memorial Stadium hitting golf balls The Big Ten tennis champion­ into nets. Before winter sets in they ships will be played from May 10 to spend long hours during the fall on 20, and Michigan, which has three the University course. full scholarships to give each year, During both seasons Bolstad con­ is a heavy favorite to win . In fact, centrates on rebuilding the younger the Wolverines, sparked by players players' swings. "The swing is the from Puerto Rico, are among the five most important thing in golf and best college teams in the country most of the kids have had to start and could possibly become one of over when they came here," Bolstad the few Big Ten teams ever to win said. ')For a long time the high an NCAA championship. school coaching hasn't been very Santrock says his team probably good, but it's getting a little better." will finish between fifth and eighth. Great golfers are produced in the warmer climates, but the Bolstad magic has made Big Ten champions out of three golfers in the last five years: Bill Brask, 1967; Dave U GOLF COURSE Haberle, 1971; and Jim Bergeson, 1972. "We 've had some outstanding 1973 SEASO RATES individuals, but the Minnesota weather is not conducive to develop­ Lo 9 Cour e (1 8 hoi ): ing a great number of quality golf­ Se son t cket fo f cu ty t ff ers," Bolstad said. "We can't have $8000 the depth the outstanding southern a on t ket for pouc; schools do." - $30 00 Gopher recruiting is limited to Min­ (No e on tick t for nesota because Bosltad has only alumnI) one scholarship to give each year. Daily tIck t prlc for MAA Bolstad, who has coached at the m mb rs - $4.25 University si nce 1947, says the Dally ticket prlc for Gophers could have another Big gu t - $5.25 Ten titlist this year in Rick Dally t cket pnce for faculty Ehrmanntraut who finished fourth in t If - $275 1972. The Gophers have two other Stud nts - $2 25 outstanding golfers in Robbie and John Harris, two brothers from Short Cours (9 hoi ): Roseau. Dally tIck t price for MAA Bolstad feels the Gophers haven't memb rs - $2.00 enough depth to repeat as Big Ten b lIy tick t price for champions, but some observers gu t - 2.25 think they could come close . Last Dally t eket price for faculty year Bolstad picked the Gophers for staff-$1 40 a second division finish. The confer­ Students - $1 10 ence favorite for the championship, played from May 18-19, is Indiana. Colin Anderson

24 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY much, except for the sprinters. "The coaching these kids get In the emphasis on the sport. Former When it's cold you can't run loose." spring and summer is very good." Siebert assistant Jerry Kindall was The sprints have long been a sore The majority of Siebert's players recently hired at Arizona to compete spot in Mmnesota track. The come from the Twin Cities. Siebert with Arizona State. Kindall has 12 Gophers have Big Ten record hold­ has only three partial scholarships to full schofarships and SIX partial ers in the distance and field events, give each year and tries to get Twin scholarships to give each year. but not In the sprints. " Practically all Cities players to pay their own way. Siebert says that Big Ten teams our kids are from Minnesota and if Baseball recruiting is not highly com­ can win the NCAA, but his 1964 you check the prep records, you'll petitive In the Midwest, and Siebert's Gophers were the last to do it. Aver­ see Minnesota sprinters have some winning reputation and record usu­ age defense and questionabfe pitch­ of the poorest times in the country." ally lure the players he wants. ing had Siebert wondering before With only three full scholarships to NCAA baseball has been the season If his club could even give each year, Griak has not been dominated In recent years by Texas, reach a Big Ten title this year. able to recrUit out-of-state sprinters Arizona State and Southern Califor­ The Gophers lost their entire No wonder he was elated when nia, and there is some doubt infield through graduation. The new Gopher football coach Cal Stoll told whether Big Ten teams can still players will suppfy adequate hitting. him that eight of his new recruits can compete successfully against but their defenSive abilities are run the 100-yard dash In 9.8 sec­ schools which place so much (Continued on pag~ 33) onds or less. The last time the Gophers won the Big Ten Outdoor championship in 1968, they were aided by foot bailer Hubie Bryant. Griak thinks this year's team must hope for a finish somewhere In the first diVision. Indiana is the favorite. Minnesota is young and could be even stronger next year If it gets some football help in the sprints. Some of the Gophers top point getters are Colin Anderson, Golden Valley, Big Ten record shot put hold­ er, Glen Bullick, Brooklyn Center, Big Ten indoor champion pole vaul­ ter; and Dennis Fee , White Bear Lake, who has recorded some of the best times in the country in the three-mile competition.

Baseball Baseball is a year-around activity for Gopher players. In addition to the spring season, most of the players participate during the summer in the Twin Cities-based Metropolitan Col­ legiate League. In the fall, the players practice outdoors at Bier­ man Field. The winter and early spring finds them practicing in the Fieldhouse. Coach Dick Siebert says the severe Minnesota climate has aided as well as hurt the Gophers. "We're forced indoors longer than most any major college in the country, but we've put the time to good use. "We probably spend more time on fundamentals than any team in the coun try. One big reason is that we're limited in what we can do inside." Siebert, who is among the most successful coaches in the country, credits part of his program's success to outstanding high school and American Legion coaching. "The baseball player is made in the sum­ David Winfield mertime in Minnesota," Siebert said.

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 2S MINNESOTA PEOPLE

Paul Cunningham '46 BA

Following a life-long dream to be a reporter, Paul Cunningham '46BA has traveled the world covering stories from political import to poignant human interest. His wandering ways began dur­ ing the Depression years when he left his hometown of New Rochelle, New York, with $70 in savings and came to the Univer ity of Minnesota. He departed after one quarter and made hi way out to California where he worked as a migrant farmhand . He tended bar for a while, old magazines door­ to-door, and drove a motor chair at the 1939 World's Fair before he joined the Air Force during World War II. 1968 Democratic and Republican receive hi pecial intere 1. He dld Cunningham saw more of the national convention and President one of televi ion' earlie t tudle world with the Air Force - Nixon's 1969 trip to We tern of mental retardation. a week-long Europe, North Africa and the Mid­ Europe, as well as little-mentioned feature on "Today" which brought dle East. subject like underground Army him the Albert La ker Award In "You think I had a job as a war newspaper editors prote ting the 1963. Other unningham reports correspondent?" he asked . "Nope. war in Vietnam and black lung di - on "Today" have covered a new I slogged through the mud with a ease among coal miners . He ha technique of teaching children to rifle like everybody el e." made some "Today" egment at read and the integration of deaf tu­ Back at Minnesota under the OJ per onal danger to him elf, other, dent into a regular ' hearing' high bill after the war, Cunningham equally demanding, with long hour chool. graduated in 1946 with a degree in and much patience. In hi 20 year with "Today" journalism and worked as a reporter In Havana during the 1959 Cunningham has had many unique for the Minneapolis Star. In 1948 Cuban revolution, Cunningham experience . Among them. he has he moved into broadcast journalism was taken into custody by a oldier participated in the fir t live satellite and began working for KSTP-TV. who offered no explanation. Taken teleca t from Europe on a regularly He joined NBC News in New York to a hou e, still with no an wers to cheduled program. ha been poked in 1949 as a writer and editor. h is que tion • he recalled, "they in the stomach by Harry Truman, Currently reporter-at-Iarge for brought me in ide, took me and has taken a roller coa ter ride NBC's "Today" show, Cunning­ up tairs. and sat me down next to with Hubert Humphrey. In 1967 he ham has been with the how since a young man with a beard . 'In­ took a year' leave of ab ence from its first telecast in 1952 . Until 1966 terview him!' they said. And that's " Today" to cover the war Viet­ h~ served as managing editor and what it wa all about." nam for NBC New . associate producer for the program; Politic and revolution are not While he was in Vietnam hi in 1966 he became a fulltime report­ Cunningham' main journalistic wife died. Since then he has remar­ er. "I enjoy it more than anything concern. Medicine and education ried and live with his four children else in the world," he says of his and wife Maaike in New Canaan, work . Connecticut. His reports for " Today" have covered very public events like the

26 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY -

COLLEGE OF PHARMACY alumni will honor University professor Charles V. Netz with a Distinquished Pharmacist Award at Charles Netz their May 24 Annual Alumni Banquet

The School of Pharmacy Alumnr Association will pre­ sent ItS Distinguished Pharmacist of the Year Award to Professor Ementus Charles V. Netz '21 BS '23MS '40PhD MAA BOSTON (MASS.) CHAPTER to hold during its 15th Annual Alumni Banquet on May 24 at the Minnesota Night at the Boston Pops on Northstar Inn, Minneapolis. Thursday. May 10, along with special Netz, who served as a professor and associate dean social gathering in Harvard Club of the University's College of Pharmacy from 1960 until his retirement In June 1966, has spent his entire profes­ The Minnesota Alumni AssociatIOn's Boston (Mass.) sional career at the University of Minnesota, moving chapter will sponsor a UniverSity of Minnesota Night at through teaching positions as an instructor, assistant pro­ the Boston Pops on Thursday, May 10. Before the con­ lessor, associate professor and professor between 1920 cert, which begins at 8 :30 p.m. in Symphony Hall, there and 1960. He inrtlally entered the College of Pharmacy will be a special SOCial hour for alumnr and friends of the as a student in the fall of 1916. Unrverslty In the President's Room of the Harvard Club He served as secretary of the Minnesota State Phar­ of Boston at 7:00 p.m. maceutical Association from 1939-48 and as that A section of tables has been reserved on the floor of organrzation's president In 1950. Symphony Hall for Minnesota graduates and their guests. Netz' book, A History of the UniverSIty of Mmnesota Tickets for the event cost $6.50 per person. Col/ege of Pharmacy, 1892-1970, was published in Reservation information is available from Mrs. W. W. December 1971 Mode, 35 Ridge Avenue, Natick, Massachusetts 01760. The Pharmacy Alumni Association's 15th Annual Ban­ Current officers of the Boston chapter are Dr. Robert quet Will open with a social hour at 6:00 p.m., followed E. Arnot '37BA, president; Walter W . Mode '43BBA by dinner at 7:00 p.m. '44MPA, vice preSident; and Mrs. William P. Horton The evening's main speaker Will be University Athletic '47BSPHNur, secretary-treasurer. Director Paul Giel. College of Pharmacy Dean Lawrence Weaver Will be present to comment about the college, and Ed Haislet, Minnesota Alumni Associaiton executive director, Will also attend to report on the Association. CLASS OF 1933 to hold 40th Anniversary Reservations for the event, at $8.00 per person, can Reunion on May 31 in St. Paul be made by contacting the College of Pharmacy Alumni Association, University of Minnesota, 2610 University The University's Class of 1933 will hold its 40th Avenue, SI. Paul, Minnesota 55114, telephone (612) 373- Anniversary Reunion celebration on Thursday, May 31 , 2466. at the Town & Country Club, SI. Paul. The event will open Reservations should be in by May 22. with a 6:00 p.m. social hour, fOllowed by dinner, a special program and danCing. Master of ceremonies for the evenrng is The Honorable Alumni Will Sponsor Reception At State Convention L. Fallon Kelly of the Minnesota Supreme Court, who is also chairman of the Class of 1933 40th Reunion commit­ The College of Pharmacy Alumni Association will spon­ tee. John Carroll, president of American Hoist & Derrick sor a reception on Friday evening, June 15, the first and currently national president of the Minnesota Alumni eveni ng of the State Pharmacy Convention, at the Asscclation, will be the event's featured speaker. Arrowhead Lodge in Alexandria, Minnesota. The recep­ Dancing to the music of the 30's will be sparked by tion will be held from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. in the Teepee the Jerry Mayerson Orchestra. Room of the Lodge which is serving as the Convention Reservations for the 40th Anniversary Reunion, at center. $10.00 per person, are available from the Class of 1933

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 27 Theodore Peterson Harold Nelson Warren Agee

Reunion Committee, University of Minnesota, 2610 field of communications law and writes extensively in his­ University Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota 55114, telephone tory. Peterson, whose book, Magazines in the 20th (612) 373-2466. Century, is considered the definitive work on the American Co-chairwomen of the Reunion committee are Marion magazine as a mass medium, has also written several Schroeder Arling and Harriet Thwing Holden. other popular textbooks. All three of these men are past Committee members include Charles W. Britzius, Harry presidents of the Association for Education in Journalism, T. Callinan, Gordon H. Carr, Evelyn Bolstad Ertl, Nola and all have records of distinguished service to other pro· Cheely Ganfield, Ralph J. Godin, Arne W. Heino, Henry fessional and community organizations as well. G. Kuiter, John N. Linnerooth, Marion Bartholomew Lam­ The Alumni Banquet evening program will feature an bert, Catherine Barrett Mulvehill, Herman l. Rosenblatt, address by Dean Peterson called " Deep Centerfold - Marshall W. Ryman and Howard S. Wakefield. Or What About Magazines In The Afterlife?". The May 18 event will begin with a social hour at 6:00 p.m., followed by dinner at 7:00 p.m. The program Will also include election of the three new members to the SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM & MASS Journalism Alumni board, and the introduction of two stu· COMMUNICATION alumni to honor three prominent graduates at May 18 Annual Alumni Banquet In St. Paul CLASS OF 1918 TO HOLD ITS The highest honor that the University of Minnesota can bestow on its graduates, the Outstanding Achievement 55TH ANNIVERSARY REUNION AT Award , will be presented to three prominent journalism TOWN & COUNTRY CLUB ON JUNE 4 educators, all alumni of the University's School of Journal­ ism & Mass Communication, at the School's Fourth A very special class - the Class of 1918 - Annual Alumni Banquet on Friday, May 18, at the Town will hold its 55th Anniversary Reunion on Mon­ & Country Club, St. Paul. day, June 4, at the Town & Country Club, St. The three honorees are Theodore B. Peterson '41 BA, Paul. dean of the College of Communications at the University Drs. Walter Partridge and lillian Fink, and of Illinois, Urbana; Harold l. Nelson '41 BA 'SOMA 'S6PhD, Parker Sanders have been the prime Instigators director of the School of Journalism at the University of behind the plans for a "real social" beginning Wisconsin, Madison; and Warren K. Agee '49MA 'SSPhD, at 11 :30 a.m. with registration, followed by a dean of the Henry W. Grady School of Journalism at the luncheon at 12:30 p.m. University of Georgia, Athens. Reservations for the event are available at In addition to being distinguished journalism educators, $3.85 per person. Spouses, family and friends these three men are also widely recognized in other areas are most welcome. relating to their profession. Agee is the co-author of Make your reservations by contacting the Introduction to Mass Communication, the most widely­ Class of 1918 Committee, University of Min­ used basic text in journalism education, and is the former nesota, 2610 University Avenue, St. Paul, Min­ executive director of Sigma Delta Chi, an influential profes­ nesota 55114, telephone (612) 373-2466. sional journalism society. Nelson is an authority in the

28 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY THE MINNESOTA ALUMNAE CLUB won the Minnesota Alumni Association's Outstanding Constituent Award for 1972 with a year's programming that included a special membership May Day Reception at the Eastcliff home of University President and Mrs. Moos, a late fall Annual Meeting that included a pre­ meeting seminar on the "Academic Woman : Prologue and Future" and an Outstanding Achievement Award presentation to eminent sociologist Dr. Jessie Barnard, as well as the group's popular, annual Champagne Tea & Fashion Revue for the benefit of women's scholarships which, in 1972, raised a record amount of funds to provide six fuJI tuition scholarships . Pictured above with the unfurled banner that signifies the Alumne Club's award are, from the left, MAA National President John Carroll, MAA Associate Director Janet Hart Widseth, who is the Association's liaison with the Alumnae Club, and MAA Executive Director Ed Haislet. The award was presented at the 1973 Spring Meeting of the Board of Directors of the Minnesota Alumni Association.

dents currently attending the School of Journalism who SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY alumni, with the will receive Alumni Scholarships for Minorities Students. Century Club, man special booth at the Reservations for the 4th Annual Alumni Banquet, at 90th meeting of the Minnesota Dental $7.00 per person, can be made by contacting the School Association in late April, early May of Journalism & Mass Communication Alumni Associa­ tion, University of Minnesota, 2610 University Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota 55114, telephone (612) 373-2466. The University of Minnesota Dental Alumni Association Reservations must be in by May 16 . and the Dental Century Club maintained an alumni infor­ Evelyn Cottle '61 BA '67 and Beverly Mindrum Johnson mation, membership and registration booth during the '59BA are co-chairwomen for the Banquet. three-day 90th meeting of the Minnesota Dental Associa­ Following the Banquet there will be an Open House tion held in Minneapolis, April 30, May 1-2. This year's at the home of Rhoda Greene Lewin '49BA '61 MA. scientific program, which was several years in assemb­ ling, brought to Minneapolis some of the finest essayists of the nation, a broad-based motion picture program, a large table clinic program, and excellent professional and commercial exhibits. Some of the highlights of the annual session were Dr. Robert Stein's speech on "The Dentist's Role in Porcelain

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 29 Fused to Gold Restorations", Dr. Robert Krejci's com­ ments on "Systems for Restoring Endodontically Treated Teeth", and Dr. Michael Till's speech, " Current Concepts in the Treatment of the Child Dental Patient". Dr. Willis B. Irons moderated a panel discussion on Dental Aux­ iliaries, while Dr. Odin Langsjoen participated in that dis­ cussion.

November 16 Dental Alumni Day Plans Firmed

The program for the Dental Alumni Day, Friday, November 16, 1973, has been completed under the direc­ tion of its chairman, Dr. Tony Romano of the University of Minnesota Dental School. The morning program, in Mayo Auditorium, will be presented by Dr. Clifford Miller, associate dean and clinic coordinator for Northwestern University School of Dentistry. He will speak on " The Cur­ rent Status of the Restorative Art". Following a luncheon program in Coffman Memorial Union, Dental alumni can attend a series of four short lectures, each of which will be given twice, in the new School of Dentistry facilities. The four clinicians who will make the presentations include Dr. Michael Till, speaking on "Acid Etching", Dr. Dennis Olson, on " The Overden­ ture", Dr. Ralph Werner on " Rubber Dam", and Dr. Jim Baker on " Temporary Coverage". Dental alumni can also tour the new dental facilities during the afternoon. This all-day November meeting will be followed by the Century Club Banquet at the Radisson Hotel Friday even­ ing. On Saturday, November 17, a post-Alumni Day Semi­ UNIVERSITY OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT nar will be held. A WARD WINNER Dr. Lester Breslow '35BA '38MD '41 MPH was named dean of the UCLA School of Pub­ lic Health in 1972. Along with the duties contmgent on a deanship, he also acts as chairman of the depart­ ment of preventive and social medicine m the UCLA School of Medicine . He has held the latter position since 1969. Earlier, from 1968-69, he taught health services administration in the School of Public Health . Before joining UCLA , Dr . Breslow worked with the Mmnesota Department of Health, served as a preven­ tive medicine officer in the U.S. Army, and headed the California Department of Public Health 's bureau of chronic diseases and division of preventive medical services before being named the state's director of public health in 1965. Dr. Breslow has built an eminent international repu­ tation on his work in public health . Among his more recent professional involvements, he has served as • Minnesota's only a member of the governing council of the American Public Health Association, as a member of the execu­ mutual sa vings bank tive board and as chairman of the action board of that same organization, as a council member of the International Epidemiological Association, and as a • Service since 1874 modal representative in community medicine for the California Regional Medical Programs Area IV Coun­ cil. Along with the University's Outstanding Achieve­ ment Award, which he received in 1970, Dr. Breslow has also been the reCipient of the APHA Sippy Award and the Lasker Award.

FARMERS AND M ECHANICS S AVINGS BANK OF M INNEAPOLIS Telephone 339- 2515/ Member F. D .l.e.

30 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY FIVE VERY. PROUD INDIVIDUALS posed for the cameras along with University President Malcolm Moos, far left, and chairman of the University Board of Regents, Elmer L. Andersen, at a mid-April meeting of the Regents . Among these five were four University of Minnesota faculty mem­ bers who had just been named Regents' Professors - the highest recognition that the University can gIve to its faculty members. The fifth person, Mrs. Wllftam A. McDonald, to the right of Regent Andersen, was on hand to receive the award for her husband who is currenUy on leave in Greece dlfectmg the University of Minnesota Messenia Expedition . McDonald is a professor of classiCS, as well as an active archaeologist. Those Regenrs Professors who were pre­ sent to receive their award included, from the left, A. B. Baker, head of the Medical School's department of neu rology; Clyde M . Christensen, professor of plant pathology and botany; Ruth E. Eckert, professor of higher education who is the first women to be named a Regent's Professor at Minnesota; and Reuben L. Hill, professor of family sociology who dtrected the Minnesota Family Study Center for 11 years .

Woman among five ociolog; and William A. Good. McDonald, cl ical tudie . faculty members who fa ulty member hold the Reg- re ceive the University's ent 'Profe or title for life, long ier. highest faculty award a he or he remain at the Regents' Profe or of eurolog A.B. Baker, 6 , is head of the mong the five Uni er ity of University Medi al School' de­ Min ne ota faculty member wh partment of neurolog . In the 27 wer named Regen ' Pr fe or at year that he has headed that depart­ the Univer ity Bo rd f Regent ment, it h become the large t in meeting in mid-April as the fir t the country. woman ever to re ei e the award, In 19-15 he helped organize one Ruth E. Eckert, profe or of higher of the first rehabilitation program educati n. for chroni all di~abled neurol gi­ R g nt ' Pr fe s r hip" are th cal patien at Minneapoli eter­ highe t r cognition gi en t facul an Ho pita!. This program led to member at the Uni er ity. The the e tabli hrnent of departments of other four profe or named in ph i a! medicine and rehabilita­ pril were A.B. Baker, n uro!og ; ti n in man Ameri an hi. Clyde M . hri ten n, plant Baker, who edited the first path I gy; Ruben . Hill, famil (Continued on page 33)

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 31 The tudent athletic ticket Will Students will benefit co t $14 .00 for a re erved eat at from University community football game and admi ion to all regularly scheduled inter olleglate businessmen's efforts for wimming, wre tling, traCk, ba eball and gymna tic events. The total co t to the public to attend the e event i over $80.00, mak ing thi ba ic $14 .00 an excellent purchase in it elf. The Stadium Vil­ ()~spsti()" lage and Dinky town buslne men and their program have increased the value of the tudent ticket to a point where it i the bigge t ticket tep"S~()et bargain ever offered a college tu­ dent anywhere. This year, again with the aid of bu ine men in the community , an T HERE WAS A TIME Wil on put it, •• is to bring the tu­ adverti ing campaign to get thiS when 14,000 to 15 ,000 tudents dents back to Memorial Stadium to information to the tudent ha been raised their cheers for the Golden cheer for Cal Stoll' Golden planned that is more exten ive than Gophers and Memorial Stadium Gophers. To do this, we mu t have any in the hi tory of the Department shook on a Saturday when the a community effort. None of u can of Intercollegiate AthletiCS. Gopher team was at borne. There do it alone." Brochure and application will be was a time when bu inessmen From that simple premi e ha mailed to about 40,000 tudent around the University community grown a unique plan never tried at who are now attending the Unwer· would close their stores and go to the University of Minnesota before, ity of Minne ota and who have the game because customer just or, as far a we know , at any other been accepted as incoming tudent did not shop on those fall Saturday campus in the United State . during the 1973-74 school year. afternoons. The Stadium Village and Din­ Naegele Outdoor Adverti ing is Slowly through the years, the kytown businessmen have pledged fumi hing Giel and hi taff the u e students have turned away from to give special offer and bargain of billboard in the Univer ity area Memorial Stadium and the Gopher to those University tudent who to adverti e the ale of tudent tiC­ football team . Last year only 4,737 purchase a football ticket for 1973 . ket . Portable billboard will also of them purcbased the low-priced Already 75 busines men have be potted around the Univer ity bargain student ticket- an all-time signed up to participate in this prog­ campu for hort peri d of time . low for football at the University ram. And Jerry Mane and Don The pring tudent ticket ale of Minnesota. Wilson have not completed their will open on May 1 and has been Now changes have been made, recruiting. extended for the full month of May . particularly in policy . Athletic Next fall' student football ticket Student can purcha e ticket Director Paul Giel and his staff will have a coupon attached that through the mail or in per on, and have taken on the job of turning the lists the participating bu ine men . are a ured orne of the be teats fortunes of Minnesota intercol­ The student who has purchased the in Memorial Stadium starting from legiate athletics around to put Gold ticket will receive a Ii t of the spe­ the North 50-yard line. Seats will Country and the Golden Gophers cials offered by each participant. be as igned on a lottery ba i. 0 back at the top of the college athle­ These businessmen and the it doe not make any difference tic powers. Department of Intercollegiate when the order are received during The public has began to return . Athletics estimate that if a tudent the month of May . The University faculty and staff ticketholder were to use all of his " We want the students back in have began to return. But the stu­ opportunities for discount and spe­ the football stadium, watching and dents still stand back, and the stu­ cials offered, he would more than cheering for the Golden Gopher ," dent section remains small and sil­ pay for hi s entertainment through Paul Giel aid . ent. his savings. • 'Cal Stoll ha been recruiting Since last fall two spokesmen some of the be t football talent in have emerged from the Univer ity the country and is working hard to business community - Jerry bring the Golden Gopher to the top Manes and Don Wilson - repres­ in college athletic ." enting the business associations Thi i the year for from Stadium Village and Din­ OPERATION TURNABOUT. kytown . "Our basic plan," as Manes and

32 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY prehen ive reference work on clini­ pathology and botany, and was archaeologi t as well as a c1as ic cal neurology, joined the Univer­ named full profe or in 1948 . profe or, McDonald has been sity' taff in 1931 a a teaching Regent ' Profe or of Higher involved with the Me enia project a i tant in neuropathology, and Education Ruth E . Eckert, 68, has for 12 years. He initiated the plan wa named profe or and head of gained national recognition in her for the excavation and is director of neurology in 1946. field . Thi year he was elected to thi intt'rdisciplinary effort, When Clyde M . hri ten en , 67 , Re­ a three-year term on the board of at Messenia, scienti ts, engineers ge nt~ ' Profe orofPlantPathology, director of the National Labora­ and classical cholar are working has pent mo t of hi academic life tory for Higher Education, Dur­ to unearth new evidence to recon- tuding the diseases of plants . Hi ham, North Carolina, which works truct the history of life in that area book, The Molds and Man , is to bring about con tructive change 3,500 years ago. WI dely u ed both in thi country and in chools and college . McDonald ha participated in abroad , while another of his book , M . Eckert was a pioneer in the several other excavations in Greece Common Edible Mushrooms , with organization of higher education as a faculty member of other its guide to ea ily recognizable edi· into a field of study. She was al 0 chool . He joined the University ble mu hroom , has been a popular one of the fir t to work in the area in 1948 as an as i tant profe sor of aId to amateur mu hroom hunter. of college credit for high chool classic and was named a full pro­ Chri ten en has worked clo ely work and advanced placement. Her fessor in 1956. WIth miUing companie on tudies publication include work in nearly of fungi in tored grain, and hi every ignificant area of higher re earch h aided in the di covery education, including planning, of better mold to make penicillin. evaluation, curriculum, faculty per- GOPHER TALES . .. He joined the Univer ity taff in onnel, univer ity organization and limited, according to Siebert. Pitch­ 1929 a an in tructor of plant tuden . Ing is unoertain because nearly all Due to retire in June, Ms. Eckert the Gopher hurlers have been joined the Uni er ity faculty in affected by sore arms at one time 1938 as an a ociate profes or and or another. was named a profe or in 1946 . The Gophers are led by captain .. Regents' Profe or of Sociology Dave Winfield who pitched very little Reuben L. Hill, 60, i known for last spring because he developed a hi work with marriage and the sore elbow early in the season. A questionable arm and a late start MAA family . Hi past re earch focu ed due to his basketball participation on family- 01 ing and adju tment to has Siebert believing that Winfield AUTO cri e . He i currently involved in may help the Gophers most as an the last year of a fi e-year federally outfielder. INSURANCE funded project through which he i "Dave is a fantastic athlete and attempting to build a more powerful shows major league potential as a theory about the family a a hitter," Siebert said. "In fact, many problem- 01 ing group. of the major league scouts are now For 11 year, until 1968, Hill higher on him as a hitter than they ANSWER directed the Minne ota Famil are as a pitcher." Unfortunately, the Gophers need Study enter that promote Winfield the pitcher more than Win­ re earch and graduate training for field the hitter. Offensive punch is tudent of the family from man the Gophers' strength led by outfield­ different di ipline . He i cur­ er Joe Comer, Excelsior; first base­ rently a re earch profe or at the man Chris Brown, St. Paul; and third enter. baseman Tim Grice, Minneapolis. William A . McDonald, 59, Reg­ All three are considered solid .300 en 'Profe or of Clas ic ,i ur­ hitters by Siebert, who says there rently on lea e in Greece dire ting are several more potential .300 hit­ For more information GA ters on the team. Wnte to. the Uni er ity of Mione ota Me - enia E pedition . n a ti e Dennis Allar, Excelsior, may be MAA Insurance Administrator the ace of the pitching staff If Win­ P.O. Box 907 field falters. Siebert feels he may be Mpls., Minnesota 55440 forced to juggle his starting pitchers MAA # ______all spring in an effort to find an effec­ tive combination. Name "If our pitching comes through we Address ______could win our fourth title in the last City ______six years," Siebert said. " But it's State ______--<.ip __ going to be tough to beat Michigan State and Iowa, last year's champ­ ions."

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 33 THEATRE STUDENT Gary S . Martinez as Willie Metcalf in "Spoon River All of Martinez' five brothers Anthology". and three iter are in how busi­ ne , in ne form or another. A a group, including the youngest 18 . month-old, they pre ent a how titled " The Family Tree". One brother play the La Vegas circuit in Mickey Finn' banjo band; one i tudying piano at the San Franci co on ervatory of Mu ic ; one perform as a maglc:iu. at a fee of $1 ()() a performance; and yet another i touring the Bay area with a group called " The Enter­ tainer ". Hi current tepfather, lay Landram , i a profe ional banjo player. Martinez ha a bachelor' degree in theatre from Loyola Univer Ity in Lo Angele and i now tudying under a Bu h Foundation Fellow- hip at the Univer ity of MIn­ ne ota . In the pring of 1974 he plan to join the Guthrie Theater company . Thi ummer he will jorn a Univer ity of Washington Theater program in England, that has per­ formance cheduled at the Edin­ burgh fe tival in cotland .

the role of !neira' daughter in the Univer ity Theatre' recent produc­ tion of Strindberg' .• A Dream Play" . A lender young man with bu hy dark hair , Martinez portrayed A young actor who ha been per­ " Willie Metcalf" , "Fiddler forming on tage since he was one Jones" and " Barney Hain­ An independent- tudy program year old repre ented the Univer ity feather" . He compo ed hi own for nur ing ervlce direct r and of Minne ota at the American Col­ background mu ic and accom­ patient care admiOJ trat r has been lege Theatre Festival in Wa hing­ panied him elf on the harmonica. e tabli hed by the niver ity of ton, D .C ., in April. Martinez grew up in an Fran­ Minne ota with a $123,000 grant " I'll have six minute to ell ci co , Calif. , where hi mother, from the W .K . Kellogg F undallon myself," Gary S . Martinez, 21 , whose profe ional name i Lila of Battle reek, Michigan. said before his performance. He Lloyd, performed a a vocalist for Mr . arolyn Rodger Bjorhn, was one of 13 theatre students from everal year at the" Hungry Eye" R .N ., M .N., formerly a i tant throughout the country who com­ and did radio commercial . She i director of the North arolina Ho - peted for two $2,000 Irene Ryan now with the an Jo e Light Opera pital A ociati n, i program direc­ Acting Awards. (Irene Ryan i the ompany . tor. Profe or Vernon Weckw rth , actre who played Granny in the Martinez' fir t on- tage appear­ director for the Univer ity' pro­ TV series, "The Beverly Hillbil­ ance, at the age of one year, was gram in continuing ho pital and lies" .) in the San Jo e Light Opera om­ health care edu ation, i th coor­ Martinez portrayed three charac­ pany's production of .. Song of dinator. ters from Spoon River Anthology in Norway" . He aid hi fir t line at Mr . Bjorlin e timated not more his brief appearance April 29 on the the age of four in the Saratoga than 10 percent f the nur ing er­ stage of the Eisenhower Theater in Community Theater' production vice director in Upper Mid e t the John F . Kennedy Center for the of " Finnian' Rainbow" . ho pitat have had formal academl Performing Arts . preparation in admini trati n. His narrator wa Margaret Nel­ .. No other category of admini'­ son , a enior theatre major from St. trative per onnet ha re p n ibl ity Peter, Minn . M . Nelson played for uch a large p rti n of inpatient

34 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY hea lth re ource and ha 0 little education program to inform pro- form al preparation and opportunity pective tuden in high schools and for acquiring the nece ary junior and tate colleges about adm mi trative kill ," he aid . career in the mineral and metallur­ The 42-month grant will be u ed gical indu trie . to devel p and update knowledge, Any tudent who meet entrance ki ll nd attitude in the team requirement for the Institute of app roa h to patient care admini tra­ Technology at the Univer ity i tio n . The service region for the eligible for aid . The awards range program in lude lowa , Kan a , from $500 to $1 ,500 per year, half Manitoba, Minne ota, Mi ouri , to be paid back by the tudent after Mo ntana , Nebra ka , orth graduation with no intere t charged . Dakota, uth Dakota and Wiscon­ Student enrolled in mineral sm. engineering program through the The program , a part of the fund will al 0 have the opportunity School of Public Health' continu­ to take part in ummer work pro­ mg education program in ho pital gram With related industrie and the and health care admini tration , government. ta rt it fir t on-campu e ion The fund i made up of contribu­ JAMES H. BINGER '41 LLB, right, tion from mining and metallurgical July 9 . Further information i avail­ chairman of the board of Honeywell, ab le from Mr . Bjorlin in 186 companie , indu try upplier and Inc., listened while University Presi­ Frontier Hall , Univer ity of Min­ alumni . It i admini tered by the dent Malcolm Moos read the cita­ ne ota, Minneapoli , Minne ota niversity through the Univer ity tion for an Outstanding Achieve­ 55455 . of Mlllile ola Foundation. ment Award presented to Binger by The Kellogg Foundation, among Student intere ted ID applying the University of Minnesota at the the 10 large t pri ate philanthropt for aid through the fund hould con­ institution's Foundation meeting in organizations in the nation, up­ tact Jame Guentzel, Director, Florida recently. ports educati nal project in health, Mineral Indu try Education Fund, education and agriculture in the 112 Mine and Metallurgy, niver- United tate , anada, Latin ity of Minne ota, Minneapoli , achieved a certain degree of distinc­ Amenca and u tralia. The Foun­ Minn. 55455 tion . dation ha a hi tory of upport for Before joining Honey ell in educational program in health 1943, Binger pra liced law in Min­ areas, including ho pital admini - neapoli for two year . He wa tration, medicine, denti try, nursing appointed pre ident of Honey\ ell and public health . in 1961 and chief e ecuti e officer of it board of dire tor in 1964. Binger, who Ii e in Wa zata, Minne ota, i a member of the board of dire tor for orthwe t Jame Henr Binger, chairman Airline, orthwe tern Bell of the board and chief e ecuti e Telephone Compan , the officer for Hone well, Inc ., orth e t Ban orporation, and i a re ei ed the Univer ity of Min­ tru tee of Bre k chool, Min- Student intere ted in mineral ne ota' Ou tanding chie emenl neapoli . and geological engineering career ward on March 23 in Palm may apply for financial aid through Bea h, Florida. the Mineral Indu try Education 1941 graduate of the ni er- Fund at the ni er ity of Min­ ity' La hool, Binger re ei ed ne ota. the a ard at the ni ersity f Min­ harp decline in the number of ne ola Foundati n' annual school ffering mineral engineer­ Pill bury Fell \ hip dinner. Bin­ mg degree and a de rea e in tu­ ger i enior i e pre ident of the dent enrollment in thi field Foundati n . prompted th Minne ota e ti n of The out tanding a hie ement A recent count of the number of the Arneri an In titute f Mining, award i the high I hon r the hour ni er ity f ulty members Metallurgi al and Petr leum ni er it c nfer on it alumni pend in the 1a r om give an Engineer (AIME) to e tabli h the and i awarded to alumnt wh ha e in mplete picture f ho the fund in De ember, 1970. really pend therr lime, the Uni er­ The fund pr ide financial ity' B ard of Regent w told in a i tan e ~ r 50 t 60 tud n a mid-April. ye ar and u e a c mprehen i

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 35 Two Minnesota department thesi on exactly that ubject in heads and a dean aid that a recent 1971 . computer print-out of the number of "He fitted each of u with a hour university faculty pent in beeper that went off at random," clas ignore time pent preparing Dean . Arthur William aid . for clas es, counseling tudents and "When the beeper ounded we each evaluating their work. The print-out wrote down what we were doing at al 0 did not count hours pent in the time." research and service, they noted. From the e accounts the graduate "A fairly typical work week for student found that nearly 40 percent a fairly typical faculty member in of a busine s admini tration faculty my department how he work member' time i pent directly or about 55 hours a week," John Dar­ indirectly in teaching , nearly 20 ley, chairman of the P ychology percent in re earch and writing, 8 department, said. He noted that 44 percent in community ervice, and percent of that time i spent on the remaining 38 percent in depart­ re earch and supervi ing graduate mental meeting or attending emi­ student ; and the re t i pent on nar and cour e for hi own per- Summer Arts Study committees or at national meeting onal development. Center to move to and in other profe sional work. The doctoral the i showed that Quadna Mountain Reso rt "We do have fairly light teach­ of the 54 hour faculty member this year; Luboff ing load in our department. which work a week, 5.5 hour are pent i a policy Ie tabli hed in order to in the cla room, 7 .7 hour are among its participants attract out tanding faculty ," Darley pent preparing for cIa ,4. 1 hour said, adding that in tenns of output are pent in evaluation of tudents' Thi 1973 Summer Art tud} the department icon i tently near work, and nearly 2 hour are pent enter will move to Quadna Moun· the top of the College of Liberal with students on an infonnal ba is . tain Re ort in Hill City. Minne ota. Arts for number of degree granted When one con iders other hour thi year after four eason at and number of hours taught. spent in such activitie a upervi ­ Hill near Grand Rapid , "You can't use stati tic alone to ing doctoral dis ertation , William ne ota. ee what faculty members are said, hi faculty pend an verage The two-month e ion , . pon­ doing," Morton Hamenne h, head of 21.4 hour a week with tudent . ored by niver ity of Minne ota of the School of Phy ic and William G . hepherd, Univer- ontinuing Education and Exten­ A tronomy, told the Regent. ity vice pre ident for academic si n in cooperalton with the Grand The statistics in question are admini tration, told the Regent Rapids P r~ nning rt ouncd. from a computerized list of class­ that there is a great deal of con em, attra t tudent fr m all eclt n of room hours recently prepared by both nationally and in the tate, the country ea h year. the University's Budget Planning about how faculty member pend The ummer rt tudy enter, and Information Service at the their time . combining ummer vacati n with reque t of the State Legislature. "We do feel we mu t have a bet­ tudy, ha developed a natl nal Hamerme h, since setting up a ter accounting of faculty a tivity," reputation for the eriou tudy of committee last fall to interview Shepherd aid, but he added that the the art . Work h p are planned for faculty members to ee what they print-out is not adequate to give a non- tudent ,a well as people with do, cited the example of a phy ic picture of the full range of fa ulty a general art background and tho e eeking advanced work with an professor who is currently prepar­ activity . ing to teach physic to medical tu­ Shepherd aid he i di cu ing e pert in their field . Eighteen work hop - rna t dents . with deans and department heads la ting one week - will be offered " This professor ha been going ways to provide quarter-by-quarter at the enter from JUl1e to medical school to find out what asse ment of how much time 1 through medical tudents need to know from faculty member pend with tu­ August 17. Cour e in mu ic. thea­ tre, voice and movement, cene physics," he said . In addition, the dents, how mu h time they pend de ign. co turning and makeup. professor is an admini trator, in administration and other dutie , photography, land cape painting. spends up to 10 hour a week advis­ and to provide infonnation such a ing students, and i conducting what national office and positions gla sblowing. po ttery. humanitie research on how computer could they hold . and literatu re are available for aid in the diagnosis of disea e. undergraduate or graduate redit. T he most concrete data on how Tuition for each work hop L fac ul ty member spend their time between $60 and $75 . was presented by the dean of the Nonnan Luboff, internationally College of Busine Admini - known choral ondu tor, will direct tration - a business admini tration a one-week p p choru w rk h p graduate tudent did his doctoral 36 ALUMNI NEWS. 1973 MAY from July 9 to 13. Hi workshop raphy and HumanitJe ; from June Most Minnesota students i designed for public chool and 25-29, Orff chulwerk, Technical are satisfied with church choral director who are cur­ Theatre (Co turning and Makeup), teachers and teaching rently directmg or are intere ted in and dvanced Photography; from beginning pop or wing choir . July 2-6, Technical Theatre A majority of tudents urveyed 1 0 thi year, Douglas John on (De ign and Con truction Labora­ of the Univer Ity of Wi con in, tory), Landscape Painting, and, in a recent poll aid that they are RIver Fall, will teach a two-week from July 2-l4, Glas blowing; atisified ith both the quality of the in truction they're receiving and co urse In offhand gla blowing from July 9-13, Pop Choru u ing bench, blow-pipe and melting onnan Luboff)· July 23-27 , 20th with mo t of their in tructors at the fu rnace. Techniques of haping, Century Writers; from July 30 to University. Ho ever, a majority of co loring, fini hing and a embling Augu t 3, Theatre, and Theatre the e tudents would also like to be will be included in the work hop Re earch; July 30-Augu t II, Pot­ in 01 ed in the proce of e aluat­ which will run from July 2 to July tery; from Augu t 6-10, uzuki ing in tructor before they are 14. Talent Education, and Jazz, and offered promotion and rai e . vai lable recreational facilitie 20th Century Mu ical Style; ug­ When a ked ho ati fled they at Quadna include indoor and out­ u t 13-17, Work hop in Mu ical are ith the overall quality of door wirnming, golf, water kiing, Comedy. in truction, 5 percent of the hor eba k riding and tenni . For m re mformation about the re pondent an wered that they ccommodation are available at 1973 ummer Art rite were ery ati fled or ati fled . Quadna Mountain Re ort Lodge, Dale Huffington, ummer Art And, 67 percent indi ated ati fa - or, for tho e wi hing to combine tud Center, Univer ity of Min­ tion with mo t or all of the fa ulty campi ng and the art , there are ne ota, 320 We bro k Hall, Min­ member from whom they ha e camp ite at nearby ShOlwood neapoli , Minne ota 5545 . taken cl e. Campground at H ill City. The e The poll, conducted on the T in camping fa ilitie include hower , Citie campu b the niversity' re troom , ele trical and ewer Office of tudent Life tudie, al 0 hookup • and recreational facilitie . may indicate that tudents ha e lit­ Its I atio n on Hill Lake make it tle contact ith fa ulty member po ible for camper to commute t outside the cla room. The tuden Quadna by boat. The Summer rt enter work- hop and their date in lude. from June 18-22. Early Mu ic Phot g-

ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY 37 polled most frequently responded own macrame arti t ," ay sheet for ob ervation and a urn­ that they knew none, or one or two Richard Barthelemy of the Bell mary of last year' rep rl . faculty well enough to a k for a Mu eum. " The male migrate "The rep rl how oriole ne t recommendation, or with whom to about a week earlier than the just about anywhere in thi area," discuss a non-classroom concern . female - in mid-May - and he Barthelemy aid. ' ' They prefer The poll utilized a randomly pick a ite. When the female eLm, cottonwood, birch and maple selected pool of 507 re pondents arrives, he tands watch while she tree ." out of an original sample of 608 . tie the dame t knots you've ever The kit al 0 contain some cotton Students also were asked several een. She carefully elect certain bit with which the oriole might questions about how faculty per­ fiber , and he tie together a ne t line the bottom of their ac k-like formance should be evaluated. so tough and trong that even strong ne t . Nearly all polled (99 percent) felt wind eldom damage it." Barthelemy ha another ugge . that evaluating a facu lty member' One item in the kit i a one-yard tion for people who already have teaching is very important or impor­ length of rope. ' You shred the rope the book from la t year' kit . tant when considering him for a and hang the fiber near your win­ " Since the kit contain lots of fiber. promotion or raise . Another 82 per­ dow, " Barthelemy explained . why not order another kit thi year cent fe lt the evaluation of a faculty " Then when the oriole pots your and hare the rope and the book member's performance as an fiber from the ai r, he figure , with a friend?" advi or - both academic and per­ 'Boy! Here' ome material I can "That way , you can give the sonal - was important or very use right here! ' whole kit to your friend, and till important; and 77 percent felt " And, very often, they ' ll build find out from last year' ob ervatlOn evaluation of research and scholarly their ne t nearby . Then you can report what the ne ting pattern activities was important or very watch the whole operation - from were in 1972 . And, you'll be help­ important. fiber-gathering to nest-building to ing out the Touch and See Room " Most students felt they should be rai ing the whole family - and The Touch and See Room i an involved in a faculty member' hear their ong , too" area in the mu eum where anybody , evaluation process. A majority Barthelemy has a tip for oriole including children , can handle would prefer voting membership watcher . " Un trand the rope," he bone , feather , kin and " the for students on evaluating commit­ said, " and soak the eparated tuff life i made of all to the tees . trands in warm water. They ' ll recorded ound of bird and other Since a proposal for a new tenure traighten out all by them elve . animal call ," Barthelemy ald . code is currently being debated by Just like a pre-cut home, but for the The Touch and See Room i up­ University facu lty , students were birds. " ported in part by oriole-kjt ale . asked kinds of job security for The 1973 oriole kits contain the To obtain a kit , end $1 to Oriole faculty . Over half - 53 percent rope; booklet on care, migration , Kit, Bell Mu eum of atural H IS­ - recommended limited job sec­ feeding - Barthelemy report tory , Univer ity of Minne ota, urity, in the form of one- or two­ orioles like marmalade - a data Minneapoli , Minne ota 55455 . year binding contracts. Twenty­ seven percent chose permanent job security with no firing except for cause. From Minnesota alumnus Alexander M. Gow '23EM of Kansas CIty

There 's nothing like the " Alumni News" to make Oriole macrame artists some of us realize that ''tempus fuglts" ! need pre-cut nesting The only personal Items of the alumni of 1934 and prior years are In the obituary column In the materials - from U April Issue. Maybe that's the only way left to break Into print! Area residents who missed their chance to do their bit for the birds Is It? The major reason that our older alumnI last year wi ll get a second chance have not broken Into prInt In The Alumni News is thi spring. because we have not receIved the Information from The Univer ity's Bell Mu eum them to print. of Natural History has more than If, as an alumnus fo the class of 1934 and earlier (or later), you have any news that you think your 7,000 of their popular oriole­ classmates would like to know about, let us know, ne ting kits packaged and ready to and we will try to keep everyone Informed. mail in time for this year's northern Write to The Editor, University of MInnesota migration of the orange and black AlumnI News, MInnesota Alumni Association, 2610 songbirds . University Avenue, St. PaUl, MInnesota 55114. "Baltimore orioles are nature's

38 ALUMNI NEWS, 1973 MAY Available only through the Minnesota Alumni Association: Songs Of The University

rHE MlNNESOrA AlUMNI ASSOCIAr/ON ,.RESENTS

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This recording includes 16 of your favorite Univer­ sity of Minnesota songs, in stirring arrangements by Dr. Frank Bencriscutto, University bandmaster, played and sung by the University Concert and Marching Bands, the Men's Glee Club and the Unrversity of Minnesota Chorus . Enjoy all the excite­ ment and pagentry of a University football afternoon in your home. Order this excellent entertainment value today. Price postpaid. Members $1.95, non­ members, $2.95. Membership # ______Name ______

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