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Montanan Magazine, 1969-2020 University Relations

7-1-1974

Profiles, July 1974

University of Montana (Missoula, Mont.: 1965-1994)

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Recommended Citation University of Montana (Missoula, Mont.: 1965-1994), "Profiles, July 1974" (1974). Montanan Magazine, 1969-2020. 36. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/montanan/36

This Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by the University Relations at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montanan Magazine, 1969-2020 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. JUL81 1974 LIBRARY p ro file s I Vol. 6, No, 5 University of Montana, Missoula 59801 July 1974

Alumni College seminar planned for August 2-4

Environmental problems, the economics; Sandra Muckelston, changing roles of women and men. assistant dean of the law school and Native American art. East Asian culture, assistant professor of law, and H. Duane literature interpretation—all are Hampton, professor of history, will join subjects that provoke thought and the charter Alumni College faculty in debate. All are part of this summer's discussions with alumni. Alumni College program. Charter faculty members are Clancy Alumni and their spouses are invited Gordon, professor of botany; Harry to participate in the second Alumni Fritz, assistant professor of history; College seminar Aug. 2-4 at Lubrecht Richard Adler, assistant professor of Forestry Camp, 30 miles northeast of English; Jon Driessen, associate Bowers welcomed at UM Missoula. professor of sociology; Louis Hayes, Deanna Sheriff, Alumni College associate professor and chairman of "How's the fishihg?" Bowers and his family planned to director, said, "We have the ingredients political science; Mary Cummings, In-coming President Richard C. arrive in Missoula about . for a lively exchange between alumni assistant professor of social work, and Bowers and Morris Lucas could be During the reception in the and faculty with many conflicting Dave Emmons, associate professor of exchanging fish stories or University Center, Bowers said he viewpoints converging on the subject, history. discussing more serious matters is continually impressed with the ‘Man, Woman and Nature.' A variety of recreational activities will such as student government. Lucas University. was one of many students, faculty "For instance, Dave Emmons asks if be available including a river float, "I am anxious to become a and staff members who met the current environmental crisis is real fishing and nature walks. part of University of Montana. I informally with Bowers at a or imagined while Clancy Gordon The cost of the college is $50 a person think it has fine traditions, very which includes, meals, accommodations reception June 4 at the University. believes that our world is approaching good academic programs and I Bowers takes over his duties at ecological disaster!" and all activities. A reservation fee of $10 look forward very much to joining may be made now and the balance paid the beginning of July succeeding Dorothy Rochon Powers, editorial the University." and feature writer for the Spokesman- by cash, check, Bankamericard or Robert T. Pantzer whose Review newspaper in Spokane, Wash., Master Charge upon arrival at Lubrecht. resignation was effective June 30. Bowers said his primary will be the featured speaker joining Sheriff said enrollment will be limited He comes to the University from recreational activity is fishing. University faculty members in to 100 people because of space Northern Illinois University, discussiong various aspects of the limitations at Lubrecht. DeKalb, where he has served as "I think I'll be able to enjoy that theme. "I want to urge alumni to send in their provost, vice president and very much here in Western Joel Bernstein, associate professor of reservation fees so that we may hold professor of chemistry. Montana," he said. art; Tom Power, assistant professor of their places in the college," she said. 'Ditchy’ Dugan defies description

Editor's note: Edward B. Dugan, newspaper ing as he did about teaching bear mascot. Homecoming '37 saw coupe. We barreled down into the side professor of journalism, retired this year (and thank 5® Traditions Board Chairman "Chink" of the road and escaped, returned to after teaching for 37 years and advising Sky for that blessing(|^|el had been Seymour ask Dugan in the old Shack town and spent most of the rest of the the student newspaper, the Montana a ■» .Mo., about planting a phony feature story night securing the release of the kids Kaimin. Dorothy Rochon Rowers, one of a reporter fer the that Bobcats had putted a bear-nap. ‘imprisoned.' Finally, about 4 a.m., they Dugan's students who was graduated in and reporter-edit%>fpr Dugan clung to ethics. There'd be no were turned loose (yes, even shotguns 1943, wrote the following tribute to him. PftSSfSSP Messenger, fhe Grafw* falsifying the news. Fessy was stowed were involved). Anyway, I got the name She is editorial and feature writer for the Navasota Examiner, a l l Id ; safely with a rural family in Orchard of ‘Ditchy' for escaping." Spokesman-Review newspaper in Homes. “ One O'clock Dugan'' was Spokane, Wash., and the only woman to us at Montana, all the t^ugan$| But Dugan mused. The story would be unflappable. win the Ernie Pyle Memorial Award for i '1937. .. legitimate if the bear happened to be Theta house cook Mrs. Daisy Cooley outstanding achievement in journalism. ^ I ^ r iy e r y student vvhoeyer Knevy.’^ ^ heisted. So he set about the heist. made bacon, lettuce and tomato ■ tmjto'was “ Don't -Bat-An - Eyeiasfeg^p; John Forssen, Ed Erlandsen and sandwiches for lunch that made you eat By Dorothy Rochon Powers Armond Glen, fingered later as Dugan three. Eating three made staying Describe Dugan? refuse^^^-be d^fi^^^verea^^i^^ iccomplices, got Forssen's father's awake—even in a Dugan class—impos­ Come on, now! ; eyebrr d, ick. Sometime post-midnight, sible for Thetas at 1 p.m. Dugan defies description. dispatched yo^^ruhnin^forV the fagan's doers assured the rural The ultra-quiet voice of Dugan at your Besides, which one? ^assignment you'd jlt^^|M pfou co d l^^p family-Hong since asleep and now shoulder could jolt you, however, into This Dugan is legion. Ido, it kept you up a ll^g n t fig u rin ^ ^ ^ routed from bed—they were fun-loving terrible consciousness with "Am I Dozens of Dugans make up the multi­ » h e n you never Mea nt Phi Delts come to save Fessy from boring you?" faceted gentle-man who, formally as Advertising anyway ('-You :>hfi||g|;ydu.'.- marauding Bobcats. They succeeded. A friend who shall be nameless Prof. Edward B. Dugan, now says his S i^ d r') and eliminat§d e With Fessy aboard, the truck left for (Dugan's libel lectures still stick) and I Sayonara to J-School after 37 years. pondered on a whole q u a r t e f ^ ^ ^ i^ town. decided nothing could be wittier than to Before Montana met him—-striding, l^emefkber “ Diabolic DuRajfe^|p|fe. Suddenly the farm family "came set six alarm clocks to ring at intervals in long lean and tweedy cross-campus in managed r^irderous exams, eveiV^^^fc; alive" to the fact even Phi Delts don't Dugan's one o'clock. We intended to 1937 as an instructor—there was the Along with thg Blue B qc^^e Handed bear-nap at night. In "nightshirts" they remain wide-eyed through every peal, Dugan who earned a B.A. (and later an you came a .glee-pa eked grin pursured. Dugan later was to admit in and to gaze innocently at Dugan M.A.) at the University of Missouri and guaranteed to dfeatrm^^ print; "They caught up with the truck throughout. taught one year at Hardin-Simmons (until you read the first question). about a block from where we were to The worst happened, of course. University. Abilene, Texas. We weren't And take “ Ditchy Dugan,” complicity turn off and forced it to turn around and We were asleep before the first peal. aware of it yet, but there was every fully admitted by the title-holder. go back. Don Larson, then Kaimin reason for his knowing as much about Fessy I, obviously, was Montana's first editor, and I were in my black Chev (continued on page 2) Students involved in anti-poverty service

A University student discovered Student volunteers enroll for course project and although it is still in the had not prepared them for the real wearing his blue jeans and tennis shoes work at the University related to their planning ^tages. she hopes to initiate it workings of criminal justice. was invaluable in establishing rapport assignments and can earn from 12-16 SOOn. ( {; ft il 0 1 J Heide said he received a lot of "first with inmates at Montana State Prison. credits a quarter. They are given a food Jim Heide, a senior in sociology and hand experience. I could see the inade­ Mark Welch, a senior in psychology, and lodging allowance of $95 a month, psychology, worked with the Adult quacies of assembly-line justice,” he served a year from March i973-March and an addtional $50 a month is set aside Parole and Probation office in Missoula said. 1974 as a University Year for Action for each student until the completion of and handled a case load of 25. Welch said a lot of his "college ideals (UYA) volunteer at the Board of Pardons the program. He is not sure if he "helped of were shot down.” But he has been able central office in Deer Lodge. Manis said the program has bden well hindered” his clients, but he spent many to put some of the experience he gained After three months in Deer Lodge, he received by the state agencies. hours working with them. He met the back into academics, he said. said/ he became acquainted with the "We feel pleased about it,” she said. former inmates at places other than the Jorgenson's comment was, "I got an inmates and they accepted him as more "We have accomplished what we had office—their, homes or in the bars and idea what its really like. It's out there. It’s than a "bleeding heart social worker.” hoped to accomplish.” helped some get jobs and admitted to real. That he was a college student and Students theoretically are not to schools. "I have a better idea of where I want to dressed informally, he said, "went over provide staffing for the agencies, said Welch, Jorgenson and Heide all said go, what needs to be done, what is great.” Manis, but "to augment the services of they discovered that classroom training realistic and idealistic.” The prisoners also were impressed the agencies and to develop innovative that he came into their cells to talk with means of helping their clients.” them rather than bringing them up to an Welch began a project in Deer Lodge office, he said. "No one ever does this.” to enlist community volunteers to work The mission of UYA, which is funded with parolees before they are released by ACTION, a federal agency which from prison. The Montana Organization administers volunteer service programs, for Volunteer Efforts in Helena has taken is "to provide human resources on a over the project since Mark's departure. volunteer basis to organizations, Jo Jorgenson, a graduate student who agencies and groups working toward received a B.A. in sociology, worked a the elimination of the causes of full year in the UYA program for the poverty.” Board of Pardons in Missoula but Roberta Manis, director of the decided to extend her service for University of Montana UYA program, another six months. said students are recruited,, trained, Toward the end of her year with the supported and given academic credit for Board she "zeroed in on a need that I felt a year of full-time anti-poverty work. could be met.” She realized that women Most of the 17 students who convicted of crimes in Montana have participated in the first year's program little opportunity to succeed after worked in 'administrational justice having served their sentences. Women including adult probation offices, the are imprisoned either at Warm Springs Board of Pardons, juvenile probation or York, Neb., and have little or no and Aftercare, a program which helps contact with people in Montana during youth released from state penal their incarceration. institutions. Jorgenson began plans for a statewide Other students worked in agencies program in which volunteers would with an educational emphasis such as correspond with women inmates from the Assistantce to Learning Center in Montana and help them find places to Great Falls and Montana United live and jobs after they are released. She Scholarship Services. has applied for a grant to fund her Dugan defies description (continued from page 1) restrictions and, yes, even homesickness. It jolted us so severely we jerked our In counterpart, there was the Dugan chairs noisily. Dugan never missed a who was an ally to academia—against lecture syllable. Terrified into student laziness, unwillingness or wakefulness, we endured five more stubbornness. sieges of ringing alarms. The class On paper, Ed taught reporting, Jim Heide, a senior in sociology and psychology, visits an inmate in the Missoula convulsed; we didn't. We writhed. advertising, public relations. He served County jail. Heide counseled 25 paroles as a volunteer in the University Year for Dugan continued calmly on course. As as consultant to the U.S. Forest Service, Action program. we crept past his desk at class's end, he National Park Service and Corps of ignored us. We never even saw his lips Engineers. For years he taught in the move. But we heard his Dugan-esque University's School for Administrative play on words as we passed his desk: "I Leadership. Twice, he served as acting never 'dreamed' you had it in you!” dean of the' School of Journalism, Behan book is 'painless' There was the "Dugan - of - the - autumn quarter of 1964 and the year Stocking - Cap” (rumored to have come 1966-67. But Ed wanted to reamin with By Gordon Lemon essential to successful black and white from Navy-World War II days) who, his kids as a teacher. photography. overcoming Hellgate winds every winter Off paper, Ed taught us all lots more Richard W. Behan's book, "Howtobe The photography reproduced in the quarter, inevitably was first in J-School than the curriculum list showed. Positive About the Negative,” is a book is typical of the prints Behan hangs every morning. One Dugan made you look at what bargain at $4.95 and easily worth a dozen for exhibit. One of the virtues of his you could be, and cajoled you into of the popular photographic magazines. system, unlike some others, is that one's And "Coffee Pot Dugan” who made trying. Subtitled "A Systematic Technical prints do not need to look like his. It the blackest and best on campus. Another Dugan derided discour­ Approach to Moderately Serious Black gives one technical control over the "At Home Dugan” and gracious wife agement with a quip. and White Photography, Free from subjective results. Lue made every guest want to join Still another Dugan neither Independent Irritation, Written for the Duchess the beagle in never leaving the Behan credits his inspiration in part to minimized nor maximized, thereby Beginner, the Profoundly Frustrated Lee Nye, a professional photographer Dugan's fire. proving to every reporter you weren't Amateur or the Underachieving who teacher an evening University Always, year in-year out, there was the any good if you couldn't look a fact in Professional,” the book is as painless a Center course. Nye is famous in Dugan who was an ally to his the face and put it on paper. He told you learning experience as will ever happen Missoula for his photographs of vagrants kids—against pomposity, unnecessary honesty was tough long before you to black and white photographers who and winos which hang in Eddie's Club. found it out for yourself. He equipped are beyond Polaroid. Sometimes Behan's clearly labeled pet you with the knowledge that objectivity Behan's excellent wit allows him to peeves are useful. "The most important throughout your life would require you inform the beginner without boring the variable to learn how to control is to ask questions no other profession has accomplished. The technical depth is contrast in the negative.” to ask and to expose things—friends not sufficient to the needs of most but is Sometimes they are unrealistic. He excluded—that would leave you never formidable. advises purchasing an extremely limited saddened. A zone system of exposure and twin lens reflex camera which uses 120 Because he did, journalism is honest development is introduced which can film to make 2\A x 2Vi inch negatives. His in a lot of places across the country be adopted successfully without "an considerations are interesting but where it otherwise might not have been. exasperating series of long and involved irrelevant. The photographer should Everybody remembers his own exposure and development tests.” This pick his camera to fit his own Dugan—and the luckier among us know enables one to analyse the scene to be photographic interests. The several. photographed in terms of the gray tones recommended camera is not The component Dugans always of the black and white print so exposure particularly suited to anything except maintained modestly they wanted to "sit and development will accurately making larger negatives than the more below the salt.” reproduce what was seen. popular 35 millimeter cameras. For once, the many Dugans were Following these procedures, anyone The only serious omission is the wrong. with access to a darkroom can greatly procedure for adaptation of his system They can't. improve his photography. The to 35 millimeter cameras which he Edward B. Dugan "They” are the salt. techniques learned are basic and admits using. 2 UM Profiles news

Research of the Role of the Idaho Batholith in the Structural Evolution of Grant received Western Montana" under the direction of James L. Talbot, professor and chairman of the geology department. for cancer study The project will involve a study of a dome-shaped rock which was formed Kenneth F. Watson, assistant professor about 90 million years ago. It is about 100 of chemistry, has received a grant for miles wide and extends from near Lolo $74,299 from the National Institute of peak (15 miles southwest of Missoula) Health for a study of cancer-causing south to the Snake River, a distance of agents. about 200 miles. The grant will be used to study Charles N. Miller, associate professor characteristics of the biochemistry of of botany, received a $39,000 grant to viruses that are known to cause cancer in continue a two-year study entitled animals. "Structurally-preserved Conifer Cones "In our study, we hope to make a from the Late Mesozoic and Early progression from a chicken virus to a Tertiary of North America." Miller is mammalian virus, and finally to a human studying the evolution of conifer cones virus/' Watson said. through the comparative anatomy of The grant will run two years and will fossilized and living cones. be renewed at the end of that time for a third year. Watson joined the University faculty in . He was postdoctoral fellow from 1969-71 at the National Cancer Robert T. Pantzer, University of Montana out-going president, congratulates the Institute, Columbia University, New recipients of the three honorary doctoral degrees presented during York City, and was fellow of the commencement ceremonies june 9 in the Field House. From left are Pantzer, International Agency for Research on William R. "Bud" Moore, Edna Rahkin McKinnon and Lowndes Maury. Pantzer Cancer at the Robert Kock Institute, Pfeiffer wins prize presented degrees to about 1,800 students and gave his final charge to the Berlin, Germany, from 1972-73. graduating class as UM president. McKinnon receivedan honorary doctor of law for documentary degree; Maury, an honorary doctor of humane letters degree, and Moore, an honorary doctor of science, degree. E. W. Pfeiffer, professor of zoology at the University, was awarded the Inuvik Prize for the best documentary film on the human environment at the First Electron microscope purchased International Film Festival on the Human Environment in Montreal, The University of Montana has which is a government reimbursement Foundation grants Quebec, . received its first electron microscope. for the cost born by the University for Pfeiffer made the film, "Ecocide: A The new equipment, valued at $37,750, is research undertaken in the national Strategy of War," during four trips to situated in the microbiology interest by a faculty member. total $67,000 Indochina between 1969-71. It shows the department of the Health Science The microscope will be available to destructive effects of the American Building. local medical facilities. Rudbach said it The National Science Foundation has weapons systems on the human The medium-high resolution will be especially useful in processing given three grants totaling $67,000 to the environment in Cambodia, Laos, North microscope, a Carl Zeiss EM 9S-2, will be biopsy tests for diagnosis of kidney University of Montana for studies of Vietnam and South Vietnam. used for teaching and biomedical diseases. enzyme systems, conifer cones and a The Inuvik Prize, a registered piece of research. Specimen preparation dome-shaped mass of rock in Idaho. Eskimo artwork, is a 30-pound soapstone equipment Is on order, and the An $11,000 grant was made to the carving of an Eskimo hunter and his son microscope is expected to be in botany department in support of a during a seal kill. operation by the summer of 1975. Screening detects project entitled "Adaptation of Thermal Scenes of the effects of the herbicide With a resolution equivalent to 60,000 Organisms to Light Intensity" under the program, B-52 carpet (saturation) magnifications, the microscope will disease potential direction of Richard P. Sheridan, bombings of fields and forests and Rome enable the user to see and photograph assistant professor of botany. Plow destruction of cover used by the molecules. The University of Montana Health The project involves a study of Vietcong are included in the film. One The microscope, made in West Service conducted a mass screening enzyme systems which allow simple scene, showing the destruction of Germany, will be used by the program May 14-17 to find students with plants to adjust to extremes in light vegetation, is typical of what happened microbiology, botany, zoology, a high potential for cardiovascular intensities. The purpose of the study is to from Saigon to the Cambodian border, chemistry and geology departments. disease. determine if the adjustments are Pfeiffer said. Formal course offerings are expected to Dr. John B. Bruckner, who genetically or physiologically oriented. "The area of destruction by Rome be available on electron microscopy, coordinated the screening program, A grant of $17,000 was given for a Plows was as large as Rhode Island and as according to Jon A. Rudbach, associate said about 900 students were tested. project entitled "Collaborative bare as a tabletop," he said. professor of microbiology. Health Service personnel took blood The microscope was purchased with samples, family and personal histories funding from three sources: A Bio- and blood pressure readings to Medical Science Support grant from the determine whether the students might National Institute of Health; state- have cardiovascular disease later in life. appropriated money from the Bruckner said about 20 per cent of the Bain appointed director University fund, and overhead money, students tested had problems that could lead to cardiovascular disease. Philip T. Bain, associate to registrar at director * of regents reporting and "Most of those had mild cholesterol the University of Idaho, Moscow, has research from 1969-70' and assistant problems that can easily be corrected been appointed new director of registrar at the University of Idaho from with slight dietary changes," he said. admissions and records at the University 1970-72. McDuffie receives Bruckner said the Health Service of Montana. intends fo continue the screening Admissions Director Jack L. Hoover Mellon fellowship program. and Registrar Emma B. Lommasson will "This is the most important preventive become associate directors of Keith A. McDuffie, chairman of the medicine we can engage in," he said. "It admissions and records. Hoover will foreign languages department, was is at least as important as an annual handle admissions and student awarded an. Andrew Mellon physical for a young person." recruitment duties, and Lommasson will Postdoctoral. Fellowship by the be in charge of student records and the University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. graduation office. McDuffie will use the fellowship to Bain, who assumed his duties , finance research in contemporary Latin UM Profiles received his bachelor of arts-degree in American literature. One of his research Vol. 6, No. 5 English from Muskingum College, New projects will be to write a book about July 1974 Concord, Ohio, in 1965. He earned his Cesar Vallejo, 20th Century Peruvian master of education degree and doctor poet. Editor...... Judy Hensel of philosophy degree in counseling, Seven M ellon Fellowships are Photographer...... Gordon Lemon guidance and student personnel at Ohio awarded annually by the University of University, . Pittsburgh to help finance research in Published bimonthly, September He taught general science and the humanities, social sciences and through July, by the University of physical education and coached football natural sciences. Montana Information Services, and basketball at John Glenn Junior McDuffie served as chairman of the University of Montana, Missoula, High School in New Concord for a year. Faculty Senate in 1973-74. He and his Mont. 59801. Second-class postage He was resident hall director at Ohio wife and children will leave for paid at Missoula, Mont. University from 1968-69, assistant Pittsburgh in September. July 1974 3 Fishermen use butterfly nets to fish in Lake Patzcuaro in southern Mexico, an area where some of the UM students lived and worked. Foreign study

A unique approach to education

By Toni Todd The Burgundy program^ which allows sophomore in journalism students to earn their board and room by working in the vineyards, was met One day last September Becky with the most skepticism within the Goodman, 20-year-old University of foreign languages department as well as Montana student, was lost between from French authorities. But the Dijon and Bonne, France. A year ago, program may well prove to be the most Greg Parrot, another UM student, was unique. It surely had the most problems. refused the rental of a room in Vienna "There is no program like it anywhere because he was a male. Jo Vogel, that we know of," explained Bob Brock, journalism major, spent more than an who laid the ground work for the hour one Thursday last May digging a program. jeep out of the sand. The jeep was stuck Brock, assistant professor of French, on a beach in Acapulco. chose to center the program in rural Misadventures? Not at all. just French communities instead of Paris. problems that could happen anywhere. He explained: "This in no way denies However, when one is unfamiliar with the value of Paris and its monuments, or the country and its people, alone and the value of traditional university study. unsure of the langauge, such situations It is an alternative. Nor is the program for take on significance. everyone. It demands a dedication, a And they did for the students who tolerance that goes far beyond the participated in the three UM foreign demands of any formal study plan." study programs. Three years ago the The Burgundy program was a success idea of a foreign study program at the despite unexpected problems. The University was just that, an idea. Today French contact furnished by the French Hochsolden in Otztaler, Alpen, Austria is where Luci Rogers, one of the faculty and students alike are proud of a embassy in New York proved to be less University of Montana students, worked one summer. program which they describe as "truly than truthful or*reliable. The contact, unique." who was responsible for making classrooms, teachers and finds UM The UM student in Vienna attends Joan Birch, assistant professor of arrangements for students to work and students rooms throughout the city. classes in German, Austrian and foreign languages, said, "There are live with French families, caused some "As far as we know, UM and one other Viennese culture and Austrian theater. hundreds of study abroad programs to confusion for both the students and the college are the only two American Classes are taught primarily by native choose from or model after, but for one French families before things were schools to receive this service," she said. Austrians in German. The theater course reason or another none of them fit the finally settled. The Vienna Program is the only one of needs of our students. Actually this gave "The one useful contribution of M. includes reading, studying and seeing the three that does not place the four plays performed during the current us the impetus to start our own Catherin (the contact) was to meet the students with families, because it would theater season in Vienna. program." students at Orly airport with a large sign be almost impossible in such a big city, All three programs emphasize getting The University's Mexican study reading 'Bourgogne-Montana/ and get Birch explained. away from "overseas ghettos," where program designed by James A. Flightner, them on the right train the next day," The cost of the program, because of Americans group together and are assistant professor of Spanish, served as a Brock said. the expense of living in the city, is general model for the other two, the The Spring in Vienna Program, in insulated from the people in countries higher. Compared to estimated costs of they visit. The University is a pioneer in Burgundy program and the Spring in contrast, has had unusual luck with a about $600 a quarter for the Mexican this respect, preventing the American Vienna program, although each is contact. Joan Birch, assistant professor program and $600-$900 for the ghetto situation by having students live clearly distinctive. of German, inquired about the Burgundy Program, the Vienna Program Students in the Mexican program possibilities for a small group to study in costs abput $1,200. (UM fees are w,t" families whenever possible, spend the quarter living with families in Vienna when she was there three years included in the cost.) arC°kd,,?g to Keith McDuffie, chairman villages and towns for 7-10 day periods. ago. More than half of the $1,200 is 2, * ® foreign languages department. They return periodically to a home base She was able to secure the service of handled by the student, who pays his he effect is "total immerson" into the for one or two days of in-depth study the University of Austria Foreign own rent, food and travel expenses, liv­ cu ture and language, something many large universities have failed to do, he and group discussions. Student Office which locates ing just as any Austrian student would. said. 4 UM Profiles |j Though the programs are limited to Stanford University, for example, has myself and I tried to figure out what my “ The interior of the restaurant was fifteen students, there are no plans to developed a concept that is in many goals really are. For some reason it very elegant and we were graciously enlarge them. ways like Montana's, he said. seemed easier to really confront oneself served by three or four different waiters. “ What Sanford has done/' McDuffie there in Mexico." “ Our meal was extraordinary; we had “ They would just become like any said, “ is to take the same basic direction Birch, who accompanied the students pigeon pie, pheasant, vegetables, and other program,” McDuffie said. we have, away from the overseas ghdttos last spring to Vienna, commented that excellent red wine and cake for dessert. A total of about eighty students have and over-protection and over-direction one notices an “ intensified maturation" “Grandmother got in an argument participated so far in the programs. At of students, but in some cases they have taking place in such a short time “ that it with the patron over the date of the the present time there are two in not gone nearly as far as we have is almost visual. wine. She thought the bottle that he had progress. One is in Austria under the (primarily in our Mexican and French “ The students are literally bombarded given us was older than it said on the direction of Dennis McCormick, programs) nor did they go this direction with things they never experienced label. It was amsuing because he didn't assistant professor of German, and the as soon as we d id /' before, some real difficulties and argue back, whatever she said was fine. other in Mexico under the direction of How do the students like living with alienation," she said “ They learn quickly “ The sum total of this extraordinary Kenneth Brett, assistant professor of families, often isolated for days from to cope and adapt. You can actually see meal was $75 which Grandmother Spanish. another American student or speaker? changes sometimes in their demeanor graciously paid." The University is also making plans for Most of the students said they were and deportment." One student in France decided to a summer in Montana for treated very well by their host families cook an American fried chicken dinner Bourguignons. According to Brock, the and that the experience had provided for her French family and not knowing French students will work on Montana the opportunity for true “accultura­ how to use the stove scorched it. farms and ranches under the same basic tion," eliminating an “ American tourist" 'There is no program like it “ It was just black—I mean really conditions as the Burgundy program. situation. anywhere that we know o f/ black,” Cindy Burke, senior in French, The success of these programs, UM Spanish major Susan Bundy, who remembers. “ But my family was so McDuffie says, is due to student graduated in 1972 and was in Mexico the sympathetic and kind that they ate it cooperation and the hard work of the first year of the program, referred to the saying 'magnifique, magnifique.' " faculty. But without the continued support of Richard Solberg, dean of the Mexican experience as having many Two journals point up the diversity of McDuffie explained that although all College of Arts and Sciences, they never different aspects: experiences within programs and three programs differ from one another, “ Most important to me was being able their core is essentially the same. He said woujd have become a reality, he said. counties. The subject? Food, of course. The students all had an opinion on the to adopt their life, their customs, and to Bundy writes, “ Coming from a long several factors contribute to make the value of the program as an educational accept it as being right and normal. I had line of eaters, I had quite a time with the UM programs truly different from experience. They varied only in the to conform to their culture and their food, although I ate everything fhat was similar attempts: the avoidance, in two wording. ways, leaving my North American put in front of me, most of the time. cases, of big city cultures in favor of sensitivities behind. Three meals a day, seven days a week I contact with rural cultures; the cost, “ Too many people visit a foreign ate tortillas and refried beans—the basic kept at a minimum, and the keeping of 'For some reason it seemed country taking their values with them. meal of Mexico. At breakfast there was journals by students in the respective easier to really confront They look down on this backward also coffee with milk and rolls. languages. The last is a tool for oneself there in Mexico.' society, never try to learn the language “ At lunch they served a broth, the evaluating a variety of experiences of the people and never try to live like soup with noodles (very tasteless) and as which are non-academic as well as the them. And yet they judge the country, a special member of the family I progress in language skills. Starla Collum, who went on the criticize it as being backward or usually got a piece of meat. I wish I One student called his journal “ a true Mexican program last spring, said, primitive, without understanding it in hadn't One day they put this pig's skull friend" because he could express “ When you graduate you can come out the least." on the table, all covered with little hairs. himself there more easily than he could with a degree, or you can come out with Becky Goodman, a sophomore in And they started dishing up the brains. It by speaking. an education. And this program made French, found that although she went to all reminded me of the Alka Seltzer All of the students who filled out me see the purpose of applying myself France with the stereotype Frechman in commercial of 'try it, you'll like it.' questionnaires concerning the to learning." mind—someone in a beret with a loaf of “ One day I went to visit a lady and she programs thought that the journals were Jan Isreal said, “ I'd honestly say that a bread under his arm—the French too offered me a tamale of little fish. To turn invaluable. Comments varied: “ they program like this is where education is had their notions. down the food offering of a person is made us better observers," “ a way to let really at. I got more out of this One Frenchman told her that like rejecting their friendship, so I took loose of my frustrations," “ a handy experience than three years of high everyone in America sleeps in a water it. It consisted of about 100 little... warm record keeper for future study." school Spanish and four quarters of bed and has a tractor. Another fish complete with eyeballs, bones and Although replaced in great part by college combined—and I mean that. described Americans as tall, big, in blue innards. I left her house after eating it, other types of learning, academic work Besides, this experience was exciting jeans, wearing shocking colors. And the went home to bed for a few hours, and and reading lists are also required, and real. There was very little artificial Fr^ncfysay that Americans don't 1$novy then got very sick." partially prior to going abroad. Students about it that a regular college program how to eat or drink. The other food m her diet, Bundy said, may receive three credits for seems to contain." Susan Bundy recounts her adjustment “ I loved:" independent study and twelve credits in Bob Chadwick, junior in Russian who to the culture of Tzintzuntzan, Mexico. joan Miller described from a day in language skills. was in the Burgundy program, put it this her journal what she called the “ once in Although the programs are language way: “ I will never be able to assimilate a lifetime lunch. centered, they represent 16 different this knowledge as one learning “ Today is Toussaint, an important day UM departments. The independent experience because the subject matter I for the French (like our Memorial Day) studies varied from sociological encountered was diverse and the 'One Frenchman told her and the grandmother asked us if we'd research to a photographic essay. Some learning process was mostly students declined the independent subconscious, osmosis perhaps. It is that everyone in America like to go to mass with her and after go to lunch at the Rotisserie, a well-known study option in favor of concentrating knowledge that will live with me, as part sleeps in a water bed and has restaurant in the area (Bourgogne) on the language and the culture. of me, as I lived with it." a tractor/

“ I mentally prepared myself for what I thought it would be like, but the dirt, the flies, the partially painted walls and the manner of living threw me for a loop. But I soon adjusted and everything seemed perfectly normal to me. I got so I threw my garbage on the floor or in the street just like the others; I never took more than one cold shower (in the public bathhouse) a week; I waited until my clothes got really dirty before I pounded them out on the cement wash tub. It is a totally different culture and what to us would seem very unsanitary, to them is perfectly normal." Journals, program evaluations and interviews pointed to another facet of the foreign experience, a “ change in self." One girl said, “ I am noticeably, to both myself and those who know me well, a lot more stable than when I left." Another said, “ I have become more open-minded and independent." Others spoke of emotional values, growing, learning to get along with people, self-satisfaction. One said she felt like she had come out of her “ cocoon." Jan Israel, senior in education, said, “ I think the most important thing I got out of this program was a personal one, one Several students and other workers stop for lunch in a which is hard to explain. I found time for vineyard in Pommard, Burgundy, France. self reflection. I had time to think about July 1974 5 alumnotes

Florida and the southeast. He and his TONY J. ANTONUCCI '61 counsels family live in Gainsville, Fla. and teaches disadvantaged youth in AUSTIN B. MIDDLETON x'44 was Spokane. He recently received his 20s named manager of the Northunberland, master's degree from Whitworth Pa., plant of Dempster Brothers, a College in Spokane and was selected division of Carrier Corporation. Outstanding Educator in America for C. N. "ABE" THOMPSON opened an 1973-74. office in Billings for Galusha, Higgins RAND ROBBIN '61, M.A. '62 was MARY MECHLING KALKHOVEN '25 and Galusha C.P.A. firm. He and his wife, featured at a one-man exhibition of is retired after working 15 years for the WANNA FINLEY THOMPSON '40, had etchings, woodcuts, wood engravings Food Service at the University of been living in Missoula. and colographs at the University of Oregon, Eugene. She is a teacher and EDITH MALCOLM HARPER '47, Wisconsin, Madison. He lives in Big Fork professional craftsman of macrame and county superintendent of schools in during the summer and on the west some of her work was included in a book Sweet Grass County, Big Timber, was coast during the winter. published in German and released in elected secretary of the Montana MARIE STEPHENSON ATTMORE '62 Germany and Austria. She lives in Association of County Superintendents lives in New York City, N.Y., where she is Beaverton, Ore. at its annual meeting in Helena. associate editor of an industry magazine, ROBERT FIREHAMMER '49 has "Food and Drug Packaging." She and achieved senior insurance adjuster rank her husband spent two years on the with General Adjustment Bureau, Inc., Navajo Indian Reservation in Arizona in Yakima, Wash. where they taught in a public high FRED KOENIG '49 was appointed school. representaitve for Luthern Brotherhood KENNETH C. MLEKUSH '60 was Dr. JOHN M. COLLINS '62 resigned as 30 s Fraternal Insurance and is living in Mt. named president and chief operating director of medical education at Pleasant, Mich. officer of Columbia Life Insurance Deaconess Hospital in Spokane, Wash., Co. of Florida in Palm Beach. to become clinical instructor in the family practice residency program. He passed his specialty board exams in BETTY HENDERSON '33 compiles SHIRLEY MC KOWN '51, advertising family practice in 1973 and also historical data on the Governor's director for Liberty House in Honolulu, continues his private practice. Mansion of California in Sacramento. Hawaii, received an award for the best She vyas liaison secretary for Mrs. Earl advertisement produced by a retail Warren from 1943-53 and has worked a store's advertising department. The total of 15 years in the governor's office. award is the Riley H. Allen award for GEORGE LE ROUX '35, M.A. '38 creative newspaper advertising. retired after 40 years of work, the last 20 BURTON WARREN '51 was named in teaching in secondary schpols. He is engineering administration manager for part-time instructor of French at Rogue North American Rockwell and Rockwell Community College in Grants Pass, Ore. International. He lives in Northridge, JOHN C. CARVER '39 was appointed Calif. administrator of the Field Services GROVER R. MC LAUGHLIN '52, M.E. Division of the Montana Social and '67 was hired as superintendent of Rehabilitation Services Department. schools in Hot Springs. He has been high Prior to the appointment he was school principal at Browning. administrator of the Rehabilitative JAMES M. SPENCE '54 is administrative Services Division of the Social and officer for the Chugach National Forest. Rehabilitation Services Department. He lives in Anchorage, Alaska. Phyllis Wilson, daughter of JIMME '54 MARK j. JAKOBSON '44, '50, M.A. and EILEEN POLK WILSON '53, was '47, professor of physics and named Miss Teenage Montana. They astronomy at UM, was elected a live in Trout Creek. fellow ot the American Physical Cmdr. LEON P. HOUGLUM '55 Society at the annual meeting in received a master of arts degree in Washington, D.C. education at George Washington 40s University, Washington, D. C. He is a RALPH RUNDLE '66 was appointed designated naval aviator and is assigned a vice president of Triangle Pacific as Human Goals Officer to the staff of Corp. He joined Triangle Pacific in Commander Amphibious Forces, U.S. 1970 after working several years with Atlantic Fleet. the Saint Regis Paper Co. He and his KATHERINE RUENAUVER HOGNESS family live in Old Tappan, N.J. '42 is living in Seattle where her husband was inaugurated as president of the 50s It was incorrectly reported in the University of Washington. January Profiles that Marcia McDonald Colliat 1 was living in JOHN G. DATSOPOULOS '62 is sales GRACE WRIGLEY KRANTZ '42 manager for Firestone Ihteramerica Co. substitute teaches in music, directs a Pocatello, Idaho. She and her husband and son recently moved in San Juan, . church choir, is an organist and teaches CONNIE RUDD EICHENAUER '62 is private piano and guitar lessons. She and BERT REPLOGLE '50 is principal from Paris to Phoenix, Ariz., where he is employed by Honeywell. assistant director of Mary Moppet's her husband have 13 children and live geologist of the Geo-Search Co. and Preschool of Lakeforest and lives in El on a ranch near Cottage Grove, Ore. engineering geologist of Nevada State Toro, Calif. LEWIS L. YARLETT '42 retired as Highway Department, Carson City, Nev. GILBERT BREMICKER JR. '56 was RUSSELL A. KLINGER x'62 is president regional range conservationist for the PHILIP W. STROPE '50, J.D. '58 was appointed city manager of Baline, Minn. and managing director of Nan-Shan Life Soil Conservation Service in Portland, appointed Chief of Staff for Air for the ELVIN T. CHOONG '56 was promoted Insurance Co. in Taipei, Taiwan. Ore., after more that 31 years of federal Montana Air National Guard. He is a to full professor of forestry and wildlife RALPH A. LINTZ '62, M.B.A. '67 was service. He is the author of numerous partner in the law firm of Mahan and management at Louisiana State appointed director of Bank Operations publications on range management in Strope in Helena. University at Baton Rouge. and Savings for Great Northwest Federal Lt. Col. JOHN W. LESLIE '56 received Savings and Loan Association in the Distinguished Flying Cross and his Washington. The appointment is in fourth through eighth awards of the Air addition to Lintz's current position as $ 8 ,0 0 0 expected from kegger Medal for aerial achievement in vice president and Director of Southeast Asia. He is deputy chief of the Marketing. production management branch of the The Library Book Fund Drive is Aber Day was established as a campus Ogden Air Logistics Center at Hill AFB, DON F. '62 and BETTY H. SHALHOPE expected to receive between $7,500 and beautifying project in 1915 to pay tribute Utah. '62 live in Hood River, Ore., where he is $8,000 from money earned at the Third to the late William M. "Daddy" Aber, WALTER J. LONNER '56, M.A. '61 was logging superintendent for Cascade Annual Library Kegger in conjunction former professor at the University. It was promoted to professor in the Locks Lumber Co. with Aber Day May 8. observed annually until 1954 and was psychology department at Western RON ENGLE '63 was stage director for About 8,000 people attended the reactivated in 1973. Washington State College, Bellingham. the world premiere of the opera "Giants kegger which was in the Miller Creek He recently co-authored and co-edited in the Earth" at the University of North area near Missoula. The kegger grossed A cam pus-wide cleanup was several books in psychology and is the Dakota, Grand Forks. He is chairman of about $20,800, according to Clark conducted in the morning followed by a editor of the international quarterly the school's department of theater arts Hanson, chairman of the Univesity buffalo lunch on the Oval with "Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology." and president of the North Dakota Ballet Liquid Assets Corporation which has entertainment provided by the Jazz Company. sponsored the kegger for the past three Workshop. THOMAS FLYNN M.S. '64 was years. appointed vice president for student Hanson, said he estimated that $7,500 The Library Book Fund Drive was affairs at Monroe Community College in to $8,000 of the money will be given to established in 1970 by the Alumni 60s Rochester, N.Y. He had been dean of the Book Fund Drive after all bills are Association to raise money for books for students at Ocean County College in paid. the new Library. Toms River, N.J. 6 UM Profiles DONALD W. JOHNSON M.S. '64, PHILLIP ADAMSON '68, M.E. '70 was KENNETH OLSON '70, J.D. '74 plans to LAURIE PULVER '74 to MICHAEL assistant professor of biology at Idaho hired as superintendent of the Hysham open a law practice in Big Timber. LAMB '72. State University, Pocatello, was awarded School. He has been principal at SARAH J. STEBBINS '70 is field TERRI LYNN CHISM '74 to Richard $18,000 by the National Science Florence Carlton School at Florence. executive for the Black Hawk Council of Meredith. Foundation to spend nine months in RONALD ALLEN Ph.D. '68 was Girl Scouts in Madison, Wis. She plans to KAREN KOLENE STORIE '73 to David 1975 at the Gecago Institute of Tropical selected as superintendent of the Shelby begin work on a master's degree in N. Wheat. Comparative Endorinology, Nairobi, school system. He ,has been therapeutic recreation from the Kenya. superintendent of the Shepherd high University of Oregon, Eugene, this fall. Capt. GLENN L. TIMM '64 received his school for the past two years. ERIC V '71 AND DORENA MARTIN second award of the U.S. Air Force MARC DAVIS '68 is an ammunition BECKER '72 live in Peoria, III. He is Commendation Medal at Nellis AFB, quality assurance specialist with the systems analyst for Caterpillar Tractor Nev. He is an intelligence office with the Surveillance Division at the Pueblo, Co. and she is an assistant preschool deaths Tactical Fighter Weapons Center. Colo., Army Depot. He recently instructor for a Peoria school district. HENRY BEVERLY '65 was promoted to received an award and pay increase for JOHN ROBERT COMPTON '71 is a Coordinator-Training in the Employe outstanding performance of duties. pharmacist for Don's Medical Pharmacy Relations Department at Texaco's in Havre. GERALD F. “ DOC" BROWER x'39 Casper Refinery in Casper, Wyo. Rev. JAMES HALL M.A. '71 accepted died April 11 in Seattle at the age of 59. JULIA CONAWAY BONDANELLA '65 an assignment in St. Michael and All He was a senior pilot with Northwest received her doctorate in comparative Angels' Episcopal church in Tallahassee, Airlines at the time of his death. He was a literature from the University of Fla. He has been vicar of St. Andrew's member of the American Legion, the O regon, Eugene. She lives in Episcopal church in Poison for the past Airline Pilots Association, Eagles Club, Bloomington, Ind. ten years. Phi Delta Theta Alumni Association and DOUGLAS K. MIDGETT '65 is an LARRY KRUMWIEDE '71 is personnel a director of the Seattle Century Club of instructor in anthropology at the manager of the Whittier Division of YMCA. University of Iowa, Iowa City. Brooks Scanlon, Inc., in Redmond, Ore. C. F. DOBSON '13 died Feb. 16 in FRED WARREN REED '65 teaches and ANITA SCHROEBER LEWIS'71 is a staff Madison, Wis. is doing research in the sociology auditor and junior partner with the FERNAND PAUL DUCHESNEAU '37 department at the University of Allied Bankshares,lnc.,in Houston, Tex. died April 10 in Butte. He had been city- Chicago. DAVID G. CONKLIN '72 is living in county health physician in Butte since Capt. PATRICK C. Sweeney '65, J.D. Helena where he is a recreation planner 1971. He was a member of the Montana '68 is assistant staff judge advocate at for the Montana Department of Fish and Medical Association, the Silver Bow Athenai Airport, Greece. Game. County Medical Society and the Lt. RICHARD W. BARR '66 has STEVE VAN HELDEN '72 is a loan American Medical Association. He also reported for duty to a helicopter combat officer for the First Federal Savings and was a member of the Elks, Knights of support squadron at the Naval Air Loan Association in Kalispell. Columbus, the American Legion, the Station North Island in San Diego. STAN J. ZUBROWSKI '72 is a forest Disabled American Veterans and the RON JOHNSON '66 has opened the botanist with the Forest Management Veterans of Foreign Wars. Design Center in Missoula with his wife KIRBY M. FETZER '72 is a missile Institute, Canadian Forestry Service in CARL FIEBELKORN '42died Feb. 19 at Margaret. launch officer with the 91st Strategic Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Ft. Monroe, Va. LARRAE ROCHELEAU '66, M.E. '70 Missile Wing at Minot AFB, N.D. DEIRDRE MC NAMER '73 joined the BARRY S. GLEN JR. x'44 died Oct. 15 in was selected as superintendent of staff of the Associated Press Bureau in Tacoma, Wash. Thompson Falls schools. He has been Portland, Ore. She was employed by the ELIZABETH WICKES GWIN '22 died principal of Hardin Senior High School JIM PHILLIPS '68, M.E. '72 is director of AP Bureau in Helena during the April 8 in Onalaska, Wash., at the age of for the past three years. the Youth Conservation Corps camp at legislative session. 73. NANCY SASSE SASSER '66 received the Priest River Experimental Forest in MALCOLM R. PARKS '73 presented a FLORENCE THIEME HAMILTON '09 her doctorate in counselingpsychology Idaho. He is a teacher in the Helena paper at the Central States Speech died May 1 in Tillamook, Ore., at the age at Washington State University, Pullman, school‘system.^ Association Convention in Milwaukee, of 85. and is a counselor there. DAVID L. REVELL '68 was promoted to Wis. He is a graduate student at POLLY MORLEDGE HAMPTON x'44 JAMES M. SCHAFFER '66, assistant a manager in the tax department of Michigan State University, East Lansing. died April 16 in Santa Rosa, Calif., at the professor of anthropology at UM, was Haskins and Sells, CPA firm in Seattle, STEVE REESOR '73 purchased age of 51. She had worked with H and R awarded a visiting lectureship to India Wash. Roseland Drug in Lewistown. He has Block, a tax service firm, since her under the Senior Fulbright-Hays SAM KITZENBERG '69 is an account been employed as a pharmacist in husband's death six years ago. Program. He will lecture at Sri executive for Myhre Advertising in Havre. CRESWELL T. PIGOT '39 died April 1 in Venjatesware University in southern Billings. He sought the Republican MARK R. ROBERTS '73 has completed San Francisco, Calif. He was employed India for one year beginning in nomination for the east district Peace Corps training for Costa Rica with San Francisco Lincoln-Mercury and September. congressional seat held by Democrat where he will serve two years as a was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon THOMAS STERNAL M.A. '66, M.F.A. John Melcher. forestry volunteer. fraternity. '67 is a member of the Muhlenberg GENE MEAD Ph.D. '74 is director of MARGUERITE LAWRENCE College, Allentown, Pa., art faculty. the medical technology department and POLHAMUS '38 died in Missoula in assistant professor of biology at Western November. She had retired as office Michigan University, Kalamazoo. manager with Toole and Easter insurance and was active in Missoula business and golfing circles. 70s MYRTLE REA TANNER '24 died Aug. 10 in Oak Ridge, Tenn. She had been active in the Parent-Teacher Association JOHN M. BENTLEY '70 accepted a and served 17 years as a volunteer with position with the Gifford Pinchot the Red Cross Grey Ladies Service. National Forest at Cougar, Wash. Dirths RUTH CHARLES TARRANT '23 died JEROME B. CONNOLLY '70 is a May 1 in Butte at the age of 73. She had physical therapist at North Memorial taught at schools in Butte and Great Falls Hospital in Robbinsdale, Minn. and was a member of the Butte Retired ANNE COLUMBUS DOBNEY '70 is Ryan Gustof to Garth and NANCY Teachers Association. She was a member teaching in the Borken schools system in SASSE SASSER '66. of the Manual 54, Order of the Eastern Borken, West Germany. Mary Christine to WARREN '66 and Star, Daughters of the American LARRY HALVERSON '70 received his BETSY WILCOX M.A. '65. Revolution and Alpha Xi Delta social M.D. degree from the University of sorority. Oklahoma, Norman, and is beginning FRED THIEME '12 died April 27 in his residency training in family practice Mesa, Ariz., at the age of 84. He retired at the University of Missouri, Columbia. as chief of the Division of Engineering in First Lt. EDWARD A. HANSON '70 the U.S. Forest Service in Missoula in helped his unit Win the Blanchard 1950. He then lived at Finley Point on WILLIAM C. STERRETT III '71 was Trophy in the 1974 Strategic Air Flathead Lake until returning to named an international officer in the Command missile combat competition marriages Missoula in 1972. International Banking Division of the at Vanbenberg AFB, Calif. He is a missile WARREN E. THIEME x'12 died May 9 First National Bank of Atlanta. launch officer at Grand Forks AFB, N.D. in Missoula. EDWARD J. LEARY '70 was graduated RANDALL B. WALKER '51 died April from Gonzaga University Law School in 1 in Tacoma, Wash. He had worked 22 JAMES L. JONES '67, J.D. '70 resigned Spokane, Wash. He plans to attend years for Montana Lumber Sales in as an assistant attorney for Boston University this fall to obtain a BETSY SCANLIN '69 to Jeff Anderson. Missoula. He was 47. the Montana District to become master's degree in tax law. He has been Patricia Davies to WILLIAM C. VIRGINIA RIGNEY ZACHARY '34 died associated with the law firm of employed with the Spokane County BOETTCHER '63. in Boise, Idaho, at the age of 62. She and Anderson, Symmes, Forbes, Peete and Clerk and Spokane Prosecuting Linda Lee Rice to PATRICK CON­ her husband retired after operating a Brown in Billings. Attorney offices while attending law NORS '65. western store in McCall, Idaho. She had JACK PASKVAN '67, M.A. '71 is editor school. Ruth Marie Cranmer to JAMES GOW headed the McCall Heart Fund and publisher of a new newspaper, PATRICIA ZIESKE LIEBIG '70 teaches '69, M.A. '71. Association for‘ several years and had “ Outdoor Journal,'* in Victoria, B.C., art at River Valley Junior High School in MARILYN KAYE KLEFFNER '73 to been active in several social and pro­ Canada. Spring Green, Wis. She lives in Madison. Donnie Ray Hoffman. fessional clubs in Boise and McCall. July 1974 7 Grizzly

Cage

Camp

From early morning until dusk some % basketball enthusiasts, grades 8-12, embraced the rigors of the roundball sport at the first annual Grizzly Cage Camp. The week-long camp was directed by University Coach Jud Heathcote (below) and staffed by his assistant Jim Brandenburg and high school coaches from Montana schools. About 40 high school girls attended a later session of the camp.