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JANUARY, 1959

r. Vol. L VII No. 3 Januray, 1959 The BULLETIN OF BELOIT COL- Ttl£ BV~TJN OF LEGE is the official organ of the Beloit College Alumni Association and is mailed to all graduates and former students. Publication date is the 15th of every other month, starting in September, and forms close the first of each of those months. Published at Beloit, , by Beloit Col- lege, six times a year, in September, Novem- 0 ber, January, March, '.1ay, and July. e oit Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at Beloit, Wisconsin, April 26, 193 3, under the Act of Congress August 24, 1912.

Alumni Will ''Spread the Word" New Curricular Offerings Enthusiastically Received Schobrs Program for gifted Freshmen In the Measures of Man ct"ass will be: A will be started second semester with Eugene Zeltman, Chicago Lindblom; Mar- offerings in two fields cutting across v:ir- shall Fraser, Beloit; Diana Phelps, \\'/ hea- ious departments and designed to offer a tun; \'V' aync Herbranson, Kansas City challenging educational experience to a Southwest ; Thomas Doherty, Waul:.esha; limited number of first year students cho- Barbara Schultz, Chicago Lalw View; Alyn sen for their ability to do this special type Hess, free J1urt; Janice Bartizal, Berwy n; of work. Gail Langston, West Chirn8o; Cleta Miller, Also announced late in 19 5 8 was a Bay Saint Louis, ;Vliss.; Kenneth Winiecki, Russian Studies Program which also will Chicago Lindblom; Kathleen Osborn, Villa be of an inter-departmental nature, and Par/::.; Betty Shotts, Berwyn; Kenneth the acceptance of a coperative program Williams, Ruchr'ster, Minn. in Medical Technology with Beloit Muni- cipal Hospital whereby the fourth year of college work will be taken at th~ hospital, equipping graduates to go directly inta the field. The Scholars Program is a direct out- growth of the Faculty Conference at Col- lege Camp, Williams Bay, last September, when great enthusiasm greeted suggestions that a type of experience not tied ta the usual course and department requirements was needed for the few students who had the intellectual ability to probe deeply into a field that was wide and stimulating. Professor Donald A. :\1urray of the Department of Modern Languages was released from portions of his teaching load to work on the prot;ram which was Professor Murray form:illy ratified at a late fall faculty meeting. Prof. Murray has been named HE Russian Studies is a new approdch, director of the board which supervises the T allowing a concentration in one field venture, other mcmb~rs of the board being by election of courses in three different Dean Ivan M. Stone, Professors John Pinch departments. The student electing this (mathematics) ; Robert Irrmann (history) ; concentration will take three years of the Marion Stocking (English) ; Clarence Von Russian language plus a two-hour seminar, Eschen (education); md Henry \'«"ood- and will also elect prescribed courses in ard (geology). government and history. Two studies will be started at the be- Courses in Russian language have been ginning of the second semester: Growth available at Beloit for several years with of a Legend and Measure of Man with 12 Professor Nicholas M. Paley as the in- and 14 Preshman men and women regis- structor. They have grown in popularity, Tn the top picture are the eastern Regional Re/Jresentatives: seated, left to ri?,ht, Mrs. tered in each, all by invitation of the Board and at the same time, a demand arose for Parl:.er, Mrs. 1\i!oldt, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Peterson; standing, i\fr. Ripley, Mr. Maurer, Mr. following close study of high school rec- a grouping of courses that would empha- Pell'rson. Below them al"I' those from the west: seated, Mr. and Mrs. Patterson, Mr. and ords, tests, and personalities. size Russian history, economics, etc., giving Mrs. W if f urd; standing, Mrs. FeUows and Mrs. Brown. Growth of a Legend students will meet the student a greater comprehension of with Professors Murray and Irrmann of the place of the Soviet Republic in world the Board, and Professor Kirk Denmark affairs. The coming to the faculty this fall ROSPECTIVE students for Beloit High school officials and prospective of George D. Nicoll, who had specialized College in areas far removed from the students in the areas have been informed of the Dramatic Arts Department, on P Monday evenings and Thursday after- in Russian history, gave the needed per- campus-from the east coast to the west of the new service, and since returning sonnel for this concentration of studies. -will be able to get first-hand informa- to their homes, the Regional Represent- noons. Studied will be the various mani- tion on the College of today as a result atives have in many cases obtained lists festations of the Electra legend, starting in of the appointment of almost twenty of superior students and sent them to about 5 5 B. C., and an analysis will be Alumni Regional Representatives. Thirteen the College. Some are planning "coke" made of the literary techniques, the social, of them spent the November 21, 22 week- parties and other forms of entertainment historical, and cultural sources, back- end on the campus, met professors and where information can be given out con- grounds, and implications showing how students heard members of the adminis- cerning Beloit. literature reflects and affects life. Faculty involved in the Measures of trati~c staff, visited both old and new The representatives were housed with Man arc Professors Finch and Stocking buildings, then returned to their homes relatives in the city or at nearby places of the Board, and Professor E. E. LeMas- with plans outlined for an increased spread popular with parents of students. A Sat- ters of the Department of Sociology. This of information concerning their alma ma- urday noon lunch at the Corral brought group will met Wednesday evenings and ter in communities as far separated as alumni and college officials together. On Thursday afternoons to make an analysis Boston and Los Angeles. Saturday morning, the visitors attended at of the growth of techniques to find meas- i '·'l The alumni taking on this volunteer least one class, then spent the rest of the ures of the physical and social aspects of Professor Paley assignment are: day hearing about the institution from the man, concentrating on the latter. An in- Lloyd Maurer '34, Forest Hills, Long President, Registrar, Deans, Director of HE Medical Technology arrangement vestigation of the problem of what is Island. Admissions, and others. At the close of with Beloit Municipal Hospital will meant by measurement, its validity and T the day, group meetings were held with enable students in four years to obtain the William W. and Joyce Hartman Smith scope, as well as an historical approach to students now in college from the areas in- basic clements of a liberal arts course and '37, Rye, N. Y. the problem of how man gets and evaluates volved. at the same time have the technical train- Victor and Ruth Colman Peterson '38, his knowledge will be the major study. ing in laboratory techniques which will New Canaan, Conn. Alumni in the above sections arc urged Students involved will be relieved of enable them to go directly into their field. Bernice Sward Moldt (Mrs. Ernest) '33, to provide information about prospective some of the usual academic requiroments The student will fulfill all the usual Tenafly, N.J. students to the Regional Representatives, to give them more freedom for inde- requirements for a degree at Beloit College James and Leila Fraser Parker '22, Sil- and to cooperate with them in plans for pendent study and research. It is hoped except in the total number of hours. The ver Spring, Md. entertainment and interviewing. eventually to extend the offerings, making fourth year will be spent entirely at the Don '48 and Missie Hassel Patterson '49, In the more immediate area, prospective similar projects available to upperclassmen. hospital and the degree granted by the Hayward, Calif. students are being told about Beloit in a In the Growth of a Legend class will College will be the B.S. There has been a Richard and Frances Puckett Wilford series of community gatherings sponsored be: Bruce Burns, Western S/1rings; Ann strong demand, increasing in recent years, Roberts, Urbana; Julie Roe, Chicago Lind- '42, Altadena, Calif. by the Parents Committee. The first of for more specialized and technical training these was held .January 8 in the Winnetka blom; Nancy Thompson, Geneva, Ill.; of this type, while at the same time, hos- Robert '3 6 and Priscilla Wolcott Fel- Community House, and attended by about Miles Varner, Beloit; Kenneth Hoover, pitals and medical officials have been in- lows '39, Denver. I I 0 persons-students of the area, high Green Bay; Dorothy Gillett, Chicago creasingly desirous of employing those The Rev. Robert Ripley '50, Milton, school counselors, parents, alumni, and Francis W. Parker; Mary Margaret Hepp, who have had the basic liberal arts in Mass. students, faculty and staff members from Bartlesville, Okla.; Jan Forrest, Beloit; addition to technical courses. It is felt that A. Norman '48 and Marygray Orcutt the College. Other such gatherings are Frederick Lee, Waukesha; Ernest Strauch, the new arrangement will satisfy both Brown '49, Robbinsdale, Minn. (suburb of scheduled for Oak Park, Des Plaines, and Northlake, Ill.; Thomas Trautmann, Prai- these needs and will be especially popular Minneapolis). other Chicago suburbs. rie dit Sac. among the women students. THE BULLETIN OF BELOIT COLLEGE, JANUARY, 1959 1 Ford Foundation Underwrites Joint Midwest Project ~ \ 2 5,000 g rant from the Ford Foun- St. Olaf in Minnesota; Beloit, Lawrence, of higher education. All of us are tre- recruitment, pooling of library resources, A (btion, establishment of a central of- md Ripon in Wisconsin. All are mem- mendously enthused at the prospects that and sharing of faculty members. fice in Chicago, and the appointment of a bers of the Midwest 1\ thletic Conference, lie ahead for us because of this magnificent De:rn Stewart is in his tenth year as fulltime officer were dramatic develop- Beloit luving resumed its membership last grant." Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences ments in early January of the Associated fall. Clarence Faust, vice president in at Oberlin where he also is a professor of Colleges of the Midwest, of which Beloit The purpose of the Associated Colleges charge of the Ford Foundation's education economics. He is a graduate of Recd Col- is one of ten members. The new organiza- is to increase the educational effectiveness program, complimented the colleges on lege with advanced degrees from the Uni- tion is a successor to the former ra thcr and operating efficiency of member schools. their venture, calling it "perhaps the most versity of Illinois and Stanford. He has loosely-organized . They will make studies, conduct experi- comprehensive and concerted effort ever been a member of the executive board of The grant of more than half a million ments, and operate programs in the fields undertaken by any group this size to the North Central Association of Colleges dollars from the Ford foundation brings of teaching, educational evaluation, re- make a joint attack upon their common and Secondary Schools. He probably will to $ 5 5 0,000 the total mm given by that search, college finance and administration. economic and education problems ... If head up the staff in the Chicago office, org:rnization. This is to be spent over a President Miller Upton made the fol- this promising undertaking lives up to the exact location of which has not been ti ve-year period in common projects, and lowing statement when the Ford grant expectations, it will provide a useful de- determined. is to be matched by contributions from was announced: monstration to many other liberal arts The Midwest Conference was formed in the g roup. None of the money goes to "I am delighted to learn of this grant colleges that face a similar educational 192 I with Beloit as a charter member. individual colleges as such. . . . For more than a year, the presidents challenge and the same serious shortages Its activities in athletics have been en- Dem Blair Stewart of of the ten schools have been meeting to of faculty, facilities, and finance over the larged through the years until there were has been named the first president of the seek ways the colleges might cooperate to ncx t decade." :V1idwest organizations and meetings among A.C.M. and will devote full time to the do a more effective job individually and Studies may be made of academic the faculty, students, business managers, work of the Associated Colleges, probably collectively. \V'e believe there are substan- courses, relation of size to costs, alternatives admissions officers and presidents. It is in the Chicago office, starting July I fol- tial advantages to be gained by cooperating to the conventional academic year, utiliza- expected the new organization will en- lowing completion of his duties at Ober- in v:irious educational programs and in tion of facilities, the effect of independent compass all activities of this type. lin, w hich is not a member of the group. combined statistical studies. The grant studv by students, faculty salaries, scholar- Colleges which comprise the A.C.M. insures the success of this effort and will ships, loans, investment policies. Joint Total enrollment now in the ten colleges ;ire Knox and Monmouth in Illinois; Coe, enable us to achieve our highest ambitions action may be taken in the fields of ad- is approximately 10 ,000 with 700 faculty Corn ~ ll and Grinnell in Iowa; Carleton and as cooperative organizations in the field mission procedures, scholarships, student members. Alun1ni Fund Goes on Calendar Basis Beloit on Ontario St. Double Memorial When Hearst Magazines, Inc., purchased l IE 1\lumni Fund will henceforth be a t a time convenient to them. Popular Mechanics Co., 200 East Ontario T on a calendar year basis, it was decided Because of this switch-over, the 1959 St., Chicago, publishers of both PoPULAR at a fall meeting of the Alumni Fund Pund will have the added advantage of MECHANICS and SCI ENCE DIG EST, several Board, the action ·ratified by the Alumni gif ts which came in between September I Beloit alumni were affected. Council and college officials. cmd December 3 1 last year; in fact, the Roderick M. Grant '22, with the Pc>P- In recent vcars, the Fund has started on first appeal was made in early December in ULAR MECl!A::-;ICs since 19 3 5, managing September 1' of each year and ended the the form of a letter from Howard R. Jones editor since 1944, was made Editor. Wayne following August .\ 1. These dates were ' 32, Chairman of the Fund Board. \'V'hittaker '3 0, with the same magazine established to prevent the Fund closing at The 19 5 9 Fund has gotten off to a good since 1942 and since 1944 assistant man- the end of June when the rush of Com- 'tart, and on j;rnuary 5, a total of $9,560 aging editor, becomes Managing Editor. mencment a'ctivitics prevented any last- had been received from 305 alumni. In- George Clementson '30, managing edi- minute efforts. However, with the first cluded was a gift of stock valued at more tor of SuE N CF. DIGEST, has become Editor, hmd appeal not going out until February than S2,500 from one individual, and a and Frank Robinson '50, has been named or March, as in the past couple of years, gift of $1,000 from an alumnus forty Associate Edi tor. many contributors wishing to make "year- years out who had received as an under- cnd" contributions became confused as to graduate a scholarship of $400. He ex- which Fund they were donating to. pressed his appreciation of what two pro- New Type Conference It is hoped that having the Pund run on fessors had taught him, and made the con- The midwinter Alumni Conference this a January I-December ) I basis will clarify tribution in hopes that present students year will not be for Class Secretaries and the matter and enable donors to contribute may be thus enabled to get an education. Agents, as in the past nine years, but will feature a group of \V'isconsin alumni who will spend February 2 8 on the campus as Two memorial rooms-one in Hinsdale, guests of the College, hearing college of- The "'Poorn Bo)I Still ~las a Chttnce the other in Beloit-perpetuate the name ficials and faculty members, touring the of Wilfrid Asa Rowell '99, Hinsdale pas- r OINCIDENT with the College's an- to be reduced, and top-ranking students _ 1;ampus, antioining _w_i t_h a_ g.!: ou ~ of !i_ig_h tor,--Rclei-t - Co l -leg e-eha·1~ l a-i n and - H'ustcc, - \::_J--no-;:; ncemcnt of -;: n crea ;;-e:~-rn cost s-:st::Ut:'--wno- arcti11ablctofirnnc etne!r echlcat ion school counselors who will be present at who died in 1956. ing next year, an integrated plan of finan- arc still eligible for grants up to the full the same time. It is the current plan to The above portrait, by Chester Bratten cial assistance including scholarships, loans, amount of the tuition. Employment on the have the Class Secretaries Conference every of that suburb, hangs in the Rowell Room and jobs has been announced. campus and in some cases off-campus jobs, other year. · will be divided according to the financial of Union Church, served for many years Tuition, fees , and board and room costs need of the student. by Mr. Rowell. The room was dedicated have been increased $ 180 to a total overall In determining the need of the applicant Calendar October 12. cost of $ 1700 a year. At the time the in- for any form of aid, the computations of Jan. 9-Carlos Montoya recital. Now being completed in Eaton Chapel on the campus is the Rowell Room, to be crease was announced, President Miller Up- the Educational Testing Ser-vice, Princeton, l 0-Wintcr Carnival. ton declared that "Beloit College is deter- N .J., will be used. The applicant or his 14-A udubon film, Africa. used for small gatherings, meditation, and mined not to have its qualitative education parents furnish this service with complete 16-Players production "The reading. It is off the north balcony and program denied to anyone for reasons of ti nancial data, and estimates of the need Mousetrap." Repeated Jan. funds for completion of the room and demonstrable financial limitation." beyond what the parent can furnish, are 17, 19, 20, 21. furnishings were an anonymous gift. Parents have been informed of a plan of then made according to the cost at the col- 17-Alumni Council meeting. "installment" payment of college bills, lege chosen. In the past, scholarship appli- 2 0-Board of Trustees meet. Fund Established and at the same time, more generous grants cations have requested only the total annual 2 3-Final examinations start. Art A fund to assist needy women students from loan funds are to be made available. income figure without providing opportu- Center cinema "Moana." at Beloit has been established by a bequest The scholarship program is not expected nity for explaining cost items. 24-A \V'S Bluebook Ball. of Elva L. Jamieson. Miss .Jamieson '04, a 29-Civic Music Concert: Vienna high school teacher in Portage for many Choir Boys. years, left $1,000 to the College, to be Boggs Designs Striking Bank Mosaic Mural 30-Faculty & Alumni Club par- placed in a fund to be named after ,\1iss ty. Jamieson, the income to go annually to a Feb. 2-Second semester starts. woman student. Miss Jamieson died in 4-Senior Class party. 19 5 5. 7-Fraternity formals. l 0-Art League lecture. Safe is Rifled 13-14-Grccn Lake Conference. Twelve hundred dollars in cash was 15-18-Design for Living Conference. stolen from the safe in the business office 17-Dr. Theodore A. Gill lecture. of the College the night of November 8. 21-Union birthday party. Alum- The burglary took place about 9 p.m. as ni party, Lake Forest. many students were passing the building 24-Civic Music Concert. on their way to a party at the Union. A 27-Art Center cinema. night watchman called to two men he saw 28-Latin-America Night. Alum- leaving the building. One of them turned ni Conference (tentative). ,rnd fired in his direction as they fled. They Pacific Northwest Alumni .:vidently had entered and left through rnecting. two different windows. Also stolen were Mar. 3-Chamber Music Concert. checks valued at $900. 6,7-0rchesis show. 7-Campus Carnival. 13-Emlyn Williams "A Boy Thr~ e \'V'il~on Scholar~ Growing Up." Three Rdoit graduates are \\!oodrow 14-Beloit Players production. \V'ilson Scholars t his year, recipients of (Repeated March 18, 19, 20, !' rants made to enable them to prepare 21). themselves for college teaching. They arc 1 5 -18-Porter lectures, Dr. Howard Keith A l11;ozin '58, studving the philoso- Schomer. nhy of history at Yale; Clayton C. Rcevo 17-Public lecture, Dr. Howard '5 8, studying philosophy at .Stanford; and Befm·e he w ent to Finland for a year's and a trust officer of the bank. The mural, Schomer. David Thrcinen '57, continuing his study sl1td)', Franklin Boggs of the Department of glass and Italian marble mosaic, m easures 21-Sorority formals. of geology at Northwestern. The Fellow- of Art dC'signed the above mural for the 6 by 13 feet , and was executed in Milwan- 22-Delta Gamma benefit sup- ships are supported by a $2 5 ,000,000 grant Merchants E5 Sai-ings Bank of Jamsville. l~ec fallowing the ancient techniques and per. from the ford roundation. The thnne is the history of coinage, and materials of Italian era/ tsmen. W orlwd 2 3-2 5-Marriage Conference. the interested on-lookers, /iresent at th!' into the deiign are rejJresentations of 22 27-Art Center cinema. Gift to Library December dedication of the bank's new different coins from Egy/Jtian weighing 2 8-Spring recess begins. The family of the late Lucius C. Porter building, are Jane and Paul Dunwiddie, rings to the Buffala nickel. Boggs is s jJe- Apr. 6-Spring recess closes. ' OI have donated his books on Chinese children of Alan Dunwiddie, Jr. '49, mem- cializing in the study of ceramics while in June 5 -7-Commcncemen t activities. history and philosophy to the College ber of the Beloit College Alumni Council Finland on a Fulbright grant. Libraries. 2 THE BULLETIN OF BELOIT COLLEGE, JANUARY, 1959 Parents Organize to Promote the College Buccaneers Stretch Out Winning Streak ferencc play and the battle for the league and Sophomores Hiroshi Kumasaka, Chuck Bulletin championship. Klima, Chuck King, Bob Burnett, and Beloit set several records when it The best individual performance in Pollard Caldwell. Biggest loss from last defeated Grinnell 79-70 in the final December was by Sophomore Hodge who year's squad is Tim Boudreaux, who com- game of an invitational tournament at hit 22 points against Lake Forest. He also piled an impressive 29-1 dual meet record the Iowa school January 3. It gained was high scorer in the Illinois Wesleyan for the Bucs before gradu;iting last June. unofficial title of champion of the tour- and Ripon games, with 20 points each ELOIT should be proud of a squad that nament; won its fifth straight game; night. McClellan took scoring honors in was outclassed almost every time it took won its fourth game in a row this sea- two other games while Hudgens and Miller B the field , yet never once w:is outfought son against a Midwest Conference op- were high in the remaining games. or ovcrw helmed ; and of its coach who, ponent, and its 44th victory in a row pr;ictically alone, provided the leadership over Midwest opponents. Beloit defeated Wrestling ,rnd inspiration. This kind of achievement Knox 80-70 the night before, ruining TRIO of home matches against the and spirit is the very esscnse of a tradition Knox's unbroken string of victories, A January 10, and reputation for which Beloit is recog- and emerged from the Grinnell affair L:iwrence January 14, and Grinnell January nized as one of the truly great colleges the only unbeaten team. 17 climaxed first semester action for the in this country. It sets a standard against Buccaneer wrestling team, coached by Beloit 67, Lawrence 63 on January 6. which every other segment of the college Carl Nelson. community can measure the si ncerity and Mr. Mojonnier Heloit opened its season December 6 ELOIT'S basketball team entered 1959 effectiveness of its efforts.-From a letter by tieing a strong Lake forest squad, · with a winning record of four victories written hy an alumnus to Coach Pill Albert B. Mojonnier of Chicago is chair- B 14-14, in the Field House, and then par- against three defeats and high hopes of Nelson at the close of the football season. man of this year's Parents' Committee ticipated in the \Visconsin state tourna- achieving a second winning season under which is meeting periodically on the cam- ment, taking seventh place. Second semes- new Coach Bill Knapton. Life Passes pus and through various sub-committees ter play will include road matches against working on numerous projects to assist the Buccaneer hopes for a successful season Knox, Ripon, I.ake Forest and Lawrence, Lifetime passes to Beloit athletic con- College. seemed to rest on the continued improve- plus the Midwest Conference tournament tests have been mailed to alumni of \Vhcn the committee meets on the cam- ment shown by a trio of Sophomores who March 6-7 at Knox. recent years who were top award win- had accounted for almost half of the ners in various sports as undergraduates. pus, usually on a Saturday, the morning is Heading the roster of six returning team's total points in the seven opening Alf \V. Harrer, Director of Athletics, devoted to presentation of some general lettermen is Captain Colin Stetson of Chi- games. They are Dennis Hodge of Fox wishes all alumni who qualify to re- topic, frequently with faculty participa- cago who also recently was named captain Lake, Ill., Frank McClellan of Delavan, ceive these, but records are incomplete tion. In the afternoon, workshops are held of next fall's Gold football team. Other and Bill Biederman of Glen Ellyn, Ill. for the years prior to about 19 5 0. J\ny by the three sub-committees: communica- lettermen include Larry Blunt, Evans ton; Hodge, an aggressive playmaker and good alumnus who was awarded a "B" jac- tions, new student promotion, and financial Rich Kirtley, Bushnell, Ill.; Angelo Munoz, shot, led the team in scoring with 97 ket or blanket or the equivalent is en- aid and counsel. South Beloit; Ron Rasmussen, Fox Lake, points at the end of 1958 play, while Mc- titled to such a pass, and it will be Members of the committee arc: Messrs. Ill., and Joe Zickmund, Mt. Prospect. C lellan and Biederman had contributed 72 mailed ro him upon request to ;\fr. and Mesdames Raymond F. Applequist, Other prospects include Seniors Jim Brooks ;rnd 40 points respectively. Harrer. Rockford; Maxwell Arthur, Winnetka; and Tony Floridan, Junior Joe Wright, Robert D. Bart, \Vest Bend; Russell C. Coach Knapton also is counting heavily Brown, Libertyville; R. H. Burno, Chi- on Juniors Ken Porter and Craig Miller cago; Frederick P. Duerkop, Park Ridge; and Seniors Ted Olson and Paul Hudgens. \Villiam 0. Dworsack, Elmwood Park; Hudgem, the team's "quarterback" and Egbert H. Fell, Evanston; L. C. Gassman, only returning starter from last year, Pecatonica; John Kachians, Chicago; Ro- missed a good deal of early season play bert F. McCain, Brookfield; Edward C. because of an injury and his absence con- Mitchell, Aurora; Albert B. Mojonnier, tributed to the Bucs' disappointing start Chicago; Theodore Napier, Des Plaines; of three losses in the first four games. frank J. Ross, Northbrook; Rudy \Vanke, Olson, at 6-4 , the tallest man on the Beloit; E. \YI. \Vetzel, Chicago; and Mar- squad, also missed some early season games vin M. D . \Y/illiams, Rochester, Minn. because of illness and his return to full time duty is expected to improve the squad 's fortunes the rest of the season. Beloit was strictly a "home town" team Alu1nni Gatherings in December play, winning all four f

Chicago 1889-1900: 1931-1935: Charles Heckler '5 0 W. W. DeBerard '96 Sarah Dupee '3 3 2201 Ash Lane, Northbrook 505 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 11, Ill. 627 West Douglas St., Freeport, Ill. 1901-1905: 1936-1940: Denver Ralph A. Buell '01 Shirley Kretschmer Dick '36 Kenneth Naatz '50 Route 2, Janesville, Wis. , 5662 Consaul Pl., Milwaukee 17, Wis. 2070 South Stuart Dr., Zone 19 1906-1910: 1941-1945: Detroit Homer Carter '09 Hurst Gibson '42 The Rev. Marcus Johnson '28 4 3 2 5 Herrick St., Madison ", Wis: 12 3 Robert A ''e., Rockford, Ill. 121 5 Balfour Road, Grosse Pointe 1911-1915: 1946-1948: Nat Miles '11 Peter Kostantacos '48 Pox River Valley (Ill.) 412 East Ridge St., Mt. Carroll, Ill. SI 0 Paris Ave., Rockford, Ill. Margret Wilson Oddsen '32 942 Downer Pl., Aurora, 111. 1916-1920: 1949-1950: Lyle Richmond '16 Alan Dunwiddie '49 Indianapolis 720 Roger Ave., Kenilworth, Ill. J 2 5 S. East St., .Janesville, Wis. William Crawford '39 1921-1925: 1951-195 3: 3750 N. Gladstone Marion Rawls Herzog '23 Gay Taylor Witmer '51 715 Ontario St., Oak Park, Ill. 828 Eighth St., Beloit Wis. Madison 1926-19 30: 1954-1955: Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth White '37 & '40 Velma Bell Hamilton '3 0 Alexander Irvine '5 4 3 644 Lake Mendota Drive 918 Pontiac Trail, Madison, Wis. 182 5 Thorn wood Lane, Northbrook, Ill. Milwaukee 1956-1958: Eugene Schmitt Jr. '48 Joan Bainbridge '5 6 433 9 North Alpine Ave., Shorewood Route 6, Box 323, Rockton Ave., Rockford, Ill.

Minnesota ALUMNI TRUSTEES Elizabeth Cole Beard '31 Jeannette Wade Cox '17, 5747 Kimbark Ave., Chicago 37, Ill. 868 Como Ave., St. Paul 3 ·s. Robert Irvine '24, 428 Cedar St., Winnetka, Ill. William W. Bunge '23, 2232 North Lake Dr., Milwaukee 2, Wis. John Tyrrell '42 20 Jackson Rd., Scituate, Mass. New York THE BULLETIN OF BELOIT COLLEGE Published at Beloit, Wis. R6bb Quinby '27 RETURN POSTAGE GUARANTEED 36 ·Birch brook Rd., Brnnxville Pacific Northwest Robert G. Greenwood '51 8857 Juanita Dr. N.li., Kirkland, Wash. Rockford Fred N. Peterson, Jr. '5 I 810 N. Rockford Ave. St. Louis Edgar B. Roberts '3 3 142 East Lockwood Ave., Webster Groves, lv!o. Washing ton, D. C. Kenneth C. Crawford '24 1403 30t h Sc., N.W., Washington West Suburban Alumnae Elaine vonderHeydt Bristol '3 I 626 Williams St., Ri,·er Fo1<·