•RUARY 1943 •*ltei% .-"V \ v gc * j^ \ \, Xx \\ \% X V XK Food for Freedom State Senator Like father, like son — is being ap plied this winter to G. Elwood Bonine, '23, of Vandalia, in Cass county. While neither his father nor grandfather at tended Michigan State, E l w o od was a student here immediate ly after World War I and re ceived his de gree with the Class of 1923. On October 6 of t h at y e ar he married Ruth Morse, and became man ager of the Elk Park Farms between Vandalia and Niles on Highway 60. This farm has been in the family for 100 years and Elwood still calls that his first love. G. E Bonine, '23 insisted His father, James Gordon, had a good record several years ago as State Sen ator so Elwood's friends that he be a candidate for the same position this past fall. He was elected State Senator from the 7th District, compris ing Cass and Berrien counties on No vember 3, 1942. He and his wife are living at the Hotel Olds during the leg islative session, and Bonine was named as chairman of the Michigan State Col lege committee in the Senate. The Bon- ines have two children, James, a student at Howe Military academy, and Mary, Charlotte. Army Medical Corps. Drafted by Gov. M. D. Van Wagoner on January 28, 1941, Col. Harold A. Furlong, '18, Pontiac physician, served as administrator of the Michigan Coun cil of Defense until December 30, 1942, when he submitted his resignation to ac cept an assignment with the army med ical corps at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsyl vania. Furlong received no salary as defense council administrator but was paid by the federal government for his other duties as chief of the medical section of the state selective service system. A former national guard officer, Fur impressive World War I long has an record, being one of 79 heroes to whom the government of this country award ed the Congressional Medal of Honor. He was cited for heroic action during the opening of the Allies' attack in the Bois de Bantheville, France, November 1, 1918. For the same brave deed Fur long was decorated with the French Legion d'Honneur, the French Croix de Guerre with palm and the Italian Croce (Turn to Page 18) di Guerra. * THEY GAVE ALL * In this column The Record pays trib ute to State's gallant heroes. ROGER DUANE MORGAN, 1938 Lt. Roger D. Morgan, who was grad uated from the forestry division in 1938, died September 2 in Lawson General hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, following a brief illness. Lt. Morgan enlisted in the army in April, 1941, and received his commission from the officers train ing school at Fort Benning, Georgia. RICHARD BOWEN CHROUCH, 1934 Lt. Richard B. Chrouch, a graduate of the engineering division in 1934, died early in November of pneumonia while serving overseas with an anti-aircraft battalion. Lt. Chrouch was employed by Consumers Power company and Com corporation monwealth and Southern in before being called to active duty September, 1940. He was returned to civilian status a year later, was recalled in January, 1942, and to active duty in August. dispatched overseas early He two daughters. is survived by his wife and CARL FREDERICK SIGLIN, 1938 in action Major Carl F. Siglin, a graduate in landscape architecture in 1938, was kill ed in the African area on November 26, according to word received by his wife, the former Virginia Van- Atter, '37, of 17370 Wildemere, Detroit. ROGER KEAST, 1934 Capt. Roger Keast, a physical educa tion graduate in 1934 and former foot ball and track star, was killed December 1 in action in the South Pacific area. When he was called into service in April, 1941, Captain Keast was coaching ath letics at Marquette high school where his teams had won wide acclaim. His wife, the former Ruth Mary Saier, w'35, and two sons survive. ROBERT NED STEELE, 1940 Captain R. Ned Steele, of Detroit, Michigan, who was graduated from busi ness administration in 1940, was killed in action in North Africa on December 26, 1942. He is survived by his mother, a sister, and a brother, Capt. Rex Steele, '34. KENNETH FENWICK CRAWFORD JR., 1941 Lt. Kenneth F. Crawford, of Owosso, Michigan, who was graduated from po lice administration in 1941, was killed in action in North Africa on December 21, 1942. ON THE JOB Food Expert '04, One of the country's best-known ex perts on food from the raw product to left the table, Charles Woodbury, a post he had 22 h e ld f or years with the National Can- ner's association in Washington to become spe a s s i s t a nt cial to and adviser Agricultural Re search Adminis- t r a t or E . C. Auchter. C. G. Woodbury,'04 in h is n ew post Woodbury contributes his long ex perience in the scientific aspects of food production, processing and use to the solution of many research problems con nected with Secretary Wickard's respon sibilities as food administrator. A product of the Lansing schools, Woodbury entered Michigan State in 1900 and received his B.S. degree with the class of 1904, and two years later his M.S. degree in horticulture. From 1906 to 1908 he was at Purdue university as assistant horticulturist, and in 1911 was named head of the de partment of horticulture. After six years he became director of the Indiana Ex periment station and left there in 1920 to become director of the Bureau of Raw the National Canner's Research with association in Washington. He has al ways been a loyal Michigan State boost er, having served as president of the Washington D. C. alumni group. When the bronze me that group proposed morial the Union Memorial tablet building Woodbury headed the commit tee that secured the contributions. in He married Marion Benjamin, June 23, 1908, at Lafayette, Indiana. They have three children. 2 . . . T HE R E C O RD Michigan State College February 1943 R E W C3 R / Founded January 14, 1 8 96 V°L 48 " N°* 2 Iloyd Jl. Qeil, ZdUo* QUn 0. Stzut&U, AUmtti ZdUo* M. S. C. Selected as War Training Center to Michigan State college is one of 334 institutions selected by the U. S. War department train men and women for the armed forces, according to in formation the Army, Navy, and War Manpower Com mission committee. Engineers and army aviation cadets will be assigned to M.S.C. for basic instruction. recently from received There is still much uncertainty about the date when the program will begin on the campus. If rumors become real ities, here is what you may anticipate on the M.S.C. War Front: 1. Approximately 1,500 soldiers will arrive here about March 20. Before June, college officials expect there will be on the campus about 3,000 air force engineers and aviation cadets. 2. Trainees will be in uniform and will draw $50 pay monthly. 4. 3. Army and Navy will determine the curriculum trainees, but for M.S.C. will have complete control over the academic program as it is conducted here. Instruction, on a forty-eight hours- a-week basis, will be chiefly in English, mathematics, physics, his tory, geography, and languages. 5. Military activities will be kept at a minimum. Trainees will probably spend one-hour each daily in mili tary drill and in physical educa tion. 6. Trainees will be assigned here on a contract basis, the college pro viding housing and messing facil ities, medical instruction, care, books, and supplies. 7. Length of the basic training pro gram will range from twelve weeks to twenty-seven months. 8. Men who entered the armed serv ices by enlistment, induction or the Enlisted Reserve Corps will be eligible upon completion of three months basic signed back training to be as to college, and as training program signment will be on the basis of previous college training and upon results of competitive aptitude and intelligence tests. The war af fects only men of military age; training of women and the other men and (physically unqualified seventeen-year-olds) will be unaf fected by the new program. Presi dent Hannah has emphasized re peatedly that the educational pro gram for women will not be dis turbed. In fact, it is stream-lined to prepare coeds to go out to fill important jobs in industry and on the farms. The Cover The Division of Home Economics at M. S. C. is playing an important roll in conserving front for through experimentation with cooking carp, long established as a non-edible fish by many people. the home food The purpose of the research is to over come prejudice of food buyers and to encourage them to substitute low priced carp and other "coarse-fleshed" fish for the rationed meats. In the picture on cover, Dr. Thelma Porter, '21, left, and Miss Helen Baeder, of the foods and nu trition department, are shown serving stuffed baked carp — a product of their experiments. The project, sponsored by the State Conservation department and the Col lege Extension service, is conducted by the Home Economics division in cooper ation with the zoology department. Dr. Peter I. Tack, of the Zoology depart ment, states that 2,000,000 pounds of carp could be harvested annually in the warmer waters of southern Michigan. It is abundant in Saginaw Bay, Lake Erie, and most rivers in the southern counties, and can be marketed for ap proximately 10 cents a pound. 10. Students in the Enlisted Reserve Corps will be called to active duty by April 4. 11. Pre-medical and pre-dental stu dents in the enlisted reserves will be called by April 4; they will be given three months of basic train ing, and then a select group will return to some college to continue training. Veterinarians will be called to active duty by April 4 to continue and will be detailed their study on the campus. 12. Seniors in advanced R.O.T.C. will remain on inactive duty until grad uation. 13. Enlisted Reservists, expressing pref erence for V-5, V-7, or V-l train ing and who fail this month to pass an examination by the Navy re cruiting board, will automatically become unassigned army reserves, unless they desire immediate duty with the navy as apprentice sea men. 14. Students accepted by the navy and coast guard will enroll for the spring term, following which they will be put in uniform and given further training, either here or at some other school. 15. Trainees arriving on the campus will be housed in the three men's dormitories, and the seventeen fra ternities, taken over by the college and leased to the army. 16. It looks as if college sports will stand on feeble legs if the army sticks to the recent announcement of Col. Herman Buekema, in charge of the specialized college war train ing program. Students in the pro gram will not be permitted to par ticipate com petition. Despite this fact the phys ical education staff and coaches will be busier than ever develop ing a physical fitness program second to none for all men stu dents at M.S.C. intercollegiate in Published quarterly October, February, April and July, by Michigan State College, East Lansing. Address all communications concerning the magazine to the Editorial Office, Department of Publications, 10 Agricultural Hall, Michigan State College, East Lansing, Michigan. Changes of address should be sent to the office of the Alumni Recorder, Union Building, Campus. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office, East Lansing, Michigan. Member of the American Alumni Council. F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 3 $2,500 in Bonds Students at M.S.C. have sold $2,500 in stamps and bonds at their booth in the Union building. This activity repre sents only one phase of their numerous war time projects. All student social events are given a war slant. The mardi gras held last term netted over a thousand dollars with which war bonds were bought and put into a loan fund for students returning to college after the war. The student council ruled recently that 90 per cent of the profits from social functions must be invested in war bonds. A new war all time project women on the campus for the purpose of encouraging those interested to take over summer defense industry and agriculture. involves contacting jobs in In surveying the student defense proj ects which include scrap drives, first aid. and war time skills courses, Professor Tom King, faculty adviser and head of the police administration department, declared that the student defense coun cil was one of the most active in the middle west. Michigan State is a mem ber of the mid-west College War council, along with five big ten schools. State the council's is making plans now for next conference held here in March. Alumni Scholarships Michigan State College alumni clubs and alumni committees in Michigan have started a program which will culminate in the awarding of sixty-four alumni the undergraduate scholarships before close of accredited high schools in June. "The awards," according to Glen O. Stewart, director of alumni relations, "will make it possible for one and pos from sibly each senatorial district in the state to enter M.S.C. who otherwise would be financially unable to consider a college education. two outstanding students Every principal of an accredited high school in Michigan is being mailed ma terial announcing the alumni chairman in each of the 32 sena torial districts. the names of The scholarships, which amount to a waiver of S120 college fees a year, may be renewed for each of four years if the student maintains a high scholastic av erage. Candidates must be graduates the of an accredited high school, from their graduating upper one-third of class, must have demonstrated lead ership in their high school career, and should be students whose financial cir cumstances definitely warrant scholar ship aid. Students who qualify must file an ap plication blank with their district chair man before April 15. The district com mittee will select six contestants from 4 . . . T HE R E C O RD among those who apply in each district, and this group will take a comprehen sive examination on Saturday, May 1. Prof. L. C. Plant, chairman, of the fac ulty committee on scholarships, will handle the selection of at least one and two contestants who will re possibly ceive the final awards in each senator ial district. The tuition scholarships are to become effective at the beginning of the twelve- week summer session or when college opens next September. Applications may be secured from the high school prin cipal, the district chairman, or by writ ing the Alumni Office, Michigan State College, East Lansing, Michigan. Study Other Cultures Two faculty committees were appoint ed recently by President J. A. Hannah to study the feasibility of developing at Michigan State college a department of oriental and Latin American cultures. in Encouraged by nationally known dustrialists in the post-war plan, Pres ident Hannah declared industry wants from college, men and women who not only speak the languages of the coun tries in the Far East and in Latin Amer ica, but who thoroughly understand the social, economic and political structures of these countries." Employees with the specialized training," stated President Hannah, will be needed in greater num bers than ever in large industrial con cerns when peace comes." that The committees are: Oriental culture: Dean L. C. Emmons, chairman, liberal language; arts; H. C. Barnett, foreign Dean E. A. Bessey, botany and graduate school; J. M. DeHaan, psychology; W. R. Fee, history; Irma H. Gross, home management; Grace Song Line, foreign language; A. J. Panshin, forestry; H. C. Rather, farm crops. Latin American culture: Dean L. C. Emmons, chairman, liberal arts; Dean Ernest L. Anthony, agriculture; Merle Ford, home economics; Paul Honigsheim, sociology; H. R. Hunt, zoology; Mrs. Alice Leathers, foreign language; Hans L. Leonhardt, history political science; H. J. Stafseth, bacteriology; H. J. Wyngarden, economics. and by the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad vancement of teaching. The test, given to more than 30,000 students in various U. S. colleges and universities and for which standards of achievement at dif ferent educational levels have been es tablished, provides a basis for evaluat ing the quality of a student's education. The senior whose score is sufficiently high on the comprehensive examination and who has completed 180 of the 200 credits required for graduation is eligible to receive his diploma. All liberal arts seniors will be required the test. take to "This plan," stated Dean Emmons, chairman of the committee developing the war-time policy, "is an attempt to graduate students on the basis of what they know rather than what the book keeping shows. In fact, from the results of the six-hour test it is possible to pre dict a student's success in post graduate studies as accurately as from his 4-year transcript." Other committee members are: Ernest L. Anthony, dean of agri culture, H. B. Dirks, dean of engineer ing, R. C. Huston, dean of applied science, and S. E. Crowe, director of the general college and summer school. 17,000 Farmers Wartime service to Michigan agri culture, and with it recognition awards to nearly 2,200 outstanding Michigan farmers for their individual efforts in 1942, featured the 28th annual Farmers' Week at Michigan State college. Shortcuts to production needed in the departmental ex 1943 dominated hibits and programs. Nationally known speakers gave further war impetus to the state's agriculture in the three-day streamlined program, Feb. 2, 3, 4. At tendance, said E. L. Anthony, dean of agriculture, was satisfactory in view of weather and wartime travel restric tions. Total for the three days was ap proximately 17,000. Governor Harold Stassen, of Minne sota, appeared on the final day's pro gram to laud the pioneering spirit of the state's state's fame as a center of tools and machinery, the farm effort was just as essential in war, he asserted. farmers. Despite the Degrees First M.S.C. seniors called to active service before June now have an opportunity to receive their degrees sooner than they anticipated because of a recent war-time policy established by the college admin istration. Realizing that students have consider able knowledge not shown on record cards, college officials approved the use of a special comprehensive the Graduate Record Examination prepared test, records made In the background were four all-time in Michigan production filled 6,406,000 in 1942. Navy beans hundred-pound bags. Corn grown for grain yielded 69,703,000 bushels. Cows yielded 5,320,000,000 pounds of milk, and chickens laid 120,100,000 dozen eggs. That much and more, farmers have been told, is needed from Michigan farms in 1943. With less labor and little new machinery, the college's background of nearly a century of science has been made available in the emergency. Colonel Rodney Returns Col. Dorsey R. Rodney, former head of the military department at M.S.C., has again returned to succeed Col. Stuart McLeod, professor of military science and tactics, who re cently was called to Washington. to the campus Rodney, who was R.O.T.C. comman dant here from 1930 to 1935, served as commander of the second cavalry regi ment at Ft. Riley, Kansas, until 1942. Beginning at last year he headquarters Service of Supply in Wash ington, D. C. served the directors of Colonel McLeod has already left is serving the in Washington college and with the college war training program. His new position puts him to Colonel in command Beukema, director of the army college training program. second Three daughters of Colonel Rodney attended M.S.C. Graduating in the class '35, were Gertrude, now a chemist of with Parke-Davis in Detroit, and An gelica, wife of Major Lawrence Schlaus- er, Camp Lockett, California. The young est of the Rodney daughters, Agnes, was a member of the class of '37, and is now married to Major Anthony Kleitz, Ft. Oglethorpe, Georgia. Department Change Journalism and Publications depart two separate units at ment became Michigan State college on January 1. Heading the department of journal ism is Prof. A. A. Applegate, formerly journalism- in charge of the combined publications set-up, and in charge of the department of publications is Lloyd H. Geil, former associate professor of journalism. Professor Geil's duties will include all phases of the college's pub lic relations program. The department of journalism will be housed on the ground floor of the Union Building annex, near the offices of student publications. There is no change in the department of publications. location of the Enrollment 5,650 Eighty-five per from 82 counties cent of Michigan State's winter term enrollment of 5,650 students comes in largest Michigan. Counties having student registration are Wayne, with 1,006, and Ingham, 849. Other Michigan counties with a high student enrollment are Oakland, Kent, Berrien, Genesee, Saginaw, Calhoun, and Macomb. the The remaining 15 per cent of M.S.C.'s registration comes from 38 states, Dis trict of Columbia, and 13 U. S. posses- sions and foreign countries. High rank ing states are New York, with 276, and Illinois, with 121. Two divisions of study, science, Engineering showed slight enrollment and Veterinary increases. secondary On February 1 the enrollment was increased by 90 students who are fol lowing a special series of classes de veloped by Michigan State college for January graduates and for those having at least 14 units the 14- of high school credit. After credit students have completed satis factorily two terms of college work they will receive their diplomas from the high schools who endorsed the plan. school Solar Radiation is Modern solar radiation apparatus to record minutely the energy radiated by in operation at Michigan the sun is State college. The recording station operated in conjunction with the Mich igan Hydrologic Research project lo cated on college land. service, W. U. Garstka, project supervisor, working in conjunction with the federal the Mich Soil Conservation igan Agricultural Experiment station the United States Weather and with this is the 25th bureau, explains that the such station United States, but the 15th to be equip ped with the most modern equipment. to be established in Key piece of apparatus is a thermo electric pyrheliometer which measures total solar and sky radiation of the energy. Hot and cold junctions of alloys containing palladium and rhodium trans mit currents to a recording milli-volt- meter. The latter is so sensitive it re quires 10 inches of chart to register four thousandths of a volt and is too delicate to chart the current that would be gen erated if a person with metallic-filled teeth put a penny in his or her mouth. Emergency Appropriation Keeping in step with Governor Kelly's funds requesting additional policy of from the legislature on an emergency basis, Michigan State college has asked the legislators for an emergency appro priation of $472,410 for each year of the next biennium. This request is in addition to the $2,950,000 appropriation fixed by state legislation. The $472,410 emergency request will be used to help finance the accelerated summer school quarter organized similar to the fall, winter, and spring terms. This request will also supply the neces sary finances to raise the non-academic employee pay rate to the State Civil Service level, to adjust salaries to staff members in line with the increased cost of living, to provide funds for the in creased cost of supplies and materials to maintain Michigan State college, and to finance the new war research projects. No Time to Retire the faculty, returning Prof. L. C. Plant is again an active member of re cently to supervise the department of mathematics. Professor Plant, listed among the 20 "retired" faculty mem bers in recent college catalogues, actual ly never the campus. He main tained the chairmanship of the faculty committee on scholarships, with an of fice in Fairchild theater. left interfered When Dr. V. G. Grove found that his duties as head of the mathematics de partment tremendously with his first love, teaching and research, and asked to be relieved, Dean L. C. Em mons summoned Professor Plant back to his old post for the balance of this year. Said Professor Plant, "With any con science at all I could not sit down and hold my hands in this emergency even if I am of retiring age." Heat - Light - Water The rationing of fuel oil will not be a problem for Michigan State college, for its buildings are supplied with heat from the campus central heating plant which burns coal. Early last year when transportation loomed as a problem, the college con tracted for its coal, with the result that even today there is approximately 27,- 000 tons on hand. This is equivalent to a normal year's supply. On a zero day the heating plant requires about 125 to 150 tons of coal, or three carloads. Since about a year ago the power plant makes all the electric curre^t used on the campus. The demand load is 2800 kilowats although the average daily load is about 1800 kilowats. Some time ago the college installed an auto matic float on the line with the city in case of emer of Lansing, so that gency take schedule. there can be a give and Six deep wells, that go down through rock to a depth of about 300 feet supply the college with an average pump of % millions of gallons of water daily. This the city of East Lansing uses a day with its fast grow ing population. is more than Add 420,280 Lbs. in charge of Michigan State students swelled Mich igan's sugar bowl by 420,280 lbs. when they volunteered their services last fall to harvest sugar beets for farmers ex periencing war-time labor shortages. Ac cording to C. V. Ballard, County Agent leader the student vol unteer beet harvesting program, each student saved 264 pounds of sugar for each half day he worked on the farm. One thousand five-hundred and ninety students contributed as many half days cf work and averaged 91c a half day. They harvested 150 acres of sugar beets. F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 5 T 0 > • f and the Modern Woodmen of America. He is survived by his wife, two daughters, and two sons. 1895 George H. Phillips, engaged in real estate business in Michigan for over 30 years, died at the Masonic home in Alma, Michigan, on September 2. 1896 Colonel William W. Taylor, U. S. Army retired, lives in Palo Alto, California, at 1801 Waverly street. 1900 George B. Fuller, head of the educational de partment at the Boeing plant in Seattle, died in Berkeley, California, on November 23. A civil engineer, Mr. Fuller became interested in aero nautical engineering previous to World War 1 and served with the signal corps and as head of the engineering department of an aviation school in Virginia. He later became associated with the Curtiss Wright corporation and before the cur rent conflict was employed as chief engineer at the Buffalo plant. He severed connections there and joined the Boeing company where his work was training ground crews for mainte nance of Flying Fortresses. He is survived by his wife, a son, and two sisters, one of whom is Mrs. Mina Fuller Truxell. '02. of Lansing. 1901 Captain Fred S. Curtis and Mrs. Madge Finley Duke were married on October 6 and are mak ing their home in Waterford. California. Cap tain Curtis writes: "Started with '01 to be come an engineer. Look at me now. Just a land. Rice, wheat, rancher on 400 acres of chickens. Ladino clover, windmills, streams and fishing! pheasants by hundreds, blue and white herons. An Engineer. How are the mighty fallen. To think of my sad end — merely an Aggie." Colonel Mark L. Ireland. U. S. Army retired, '00) are and Mrs. Ireland living in Flint. Michigan, at 924 Lyons street. 1903 (lrma Thompson, H. Ray Kingsley is senior engineer in the War department in Washington where he lives at 2001 I street. N.W. Louis G. Michael, former United States Com Jugo missioner of Agriculture slavia, may now be reached through the De partment of State, 410 Winder building, Wash ington. in Belgrade, 1906 Word has been received of the death on March 17, 1942. of James C. Hogenson, exten sion agronomist at Utah State Agricultural College at Logan. former Edward B. McKenna. In addition to his public service Mr. Mc state senator *ierl a New College Muteum Many Michigan State alumni immed iately think of "Old Buckskin" when they recall the college museum of their day. The first thing to catch the eye those days was in of museum-goers the bridled and saddled buckskin horse at the head of the stairs on the top floor of the old library, now the ad ministration building. Since its beginning the museum col lections have grown into one of the best natural history collections of Michigan wild mammals. The present project is large habitat-group of completing Michigan stream fishes. The fish exhibit will be shown under indirect lighting with natural plant life and stream conditions related to the species concerned. the in "Old Buckskin", the horse that L. B. Baker rode the capture of Booth, Lincoln's assassin, has been cast aside since moths riddled his skin, but the present college museum has gone a long way those early days. Luther Baker, '93, son of L. B. Baker, recently told Prof. J. W. Stack, director of the college museum, that as a youth he had ridden Buckskin to deliver newspapers in Lansing. since In 1933, the museum was moved to the third floor of the present library build its ing, then moved again in the auditorium. In present location past years, its former space and now has been allotted the entire basement under large auditorium floor. the museum outgrew in 1940 to the 8 . . . T HE R E C O RD In February of last year, the college employed, for the first time, a full time museum technician, John W. Hope, form erly of the American Museum of Natural History in New York, where he worked for 15 years. Hope has a fully equipped laboratory and preparation rooms where the smallest and the largest animals are prepared for display. The museum is filled with 45 of the most modern and durable display cases obtainable. Twenty-four of these cases are completely filled at present. Recent additions to the museum out side of animal life include the valuable gun collection of the late Henry Haigh. class of 1874 and former Alumni presi fire dent. The evolution of modern that arms including some of the guns its helped America gain independence were given to the college in this collec tion. The total gun display fills three iarge cases, containing over 100 old guns, swords, hand grenades, and ammuni tion types collected from all parts of the world. Rare tapestries, ancient books, old swords, jewelry, oriental knives and Chinese and Moroccan costumes and other world oddities were given to the college by Miss Carolyn Wicker, of Battle Creek. this group Included is the famed "hari-kari" knife, collected by Miss Wicker in Japan. in topographical The evolution of the ice age in carv ing the surface features of Michigan is depicted on huge graphic illustrations the museum. This is one of the most com plete displays of its kind. the walls of lining the di Alumni are urged to write the college museum of any rector of knowledge about collections which might add to the natural history or educational value of the museum. The museum is open the week. the public daily through to Sigma Chi Comes to M. S. C. it i't 11.• rti 11 f * t *? 1 11 f #¥ $ f f t f l M t Alumni Sigma Chi Initiates First row — left to right: W. LeRoy Mailman, '18; Richard N. Hall, '30; Francis C. Dittrich, '31; Jay C. Ackerman, '25; Reynold G. Anschulz, '25; Donald Cation, Jr., "36; Carl H. Miller, Ives J. Stafford. '35. '22; Second row — left to right: Dano D. Skidmore. '40; Lloyd C. Wilson. Walter D McFarlane, '16; Walter F. Morofsky. Kenneth Hagberg. Anderson, '28 '37; Herbert Ziel, '15; Ronald C. Hess, '41; John T. Ott, '27; '27; Malcolm Henry, '26; Ralph N. Wright, 23. '03; Victor C. '29; Theodore I. Frye, Third row — left to right: Claude Postiff. '40; Russel M. Daane. '28; Thomas J. Nicol, '18; John C. Bergeon, '25; Robert L. Sweet, '35; Henrik J. Stafseth. '17. Gerald R. Montgomery, '26; Ray Hutson, '22; Thomas H. Osgood. '21; Elton B. Hill, '15. '16: Kenneth H- Lowe, '44; Anton Busser, Fourth row — left to right; A. Harvey Patterson, '28; '14; Santi M. Paganelli, '32; Robert K. Miller. '31; Theodore W. Straugfh. '42; Albert A. Forte, '41; Edward C. Maki, '41; Edmund J. Frost, '41; Palmer H. Slack, '25; Austin O. Ingersol,, '23; Henry B. Dirks, '04. l^eodore R. Hinger, Back row — left to right: Lauren P. Brown, '31; Warren E. DeYoung, '20; Burton L. Fralick, '14; Donald G. Brandow. '42; Forrest C. Strong, '24; Donald G. Zettle. '35; Howard K. Strachan. '39; Ralph B. Kling, '20; Joseph W. Stack, '15. Alumni Initiates not in picture: Marshall Goodwin, '34; Ralph C. Huston, '06; Axel J. Peterson, '21; Lloyd B. Reid. '22. Of interest to many alumni was the installation of the Gamma Psi chapter of the Sigma Chi fraternity at Michigan State college on December 5. The Sigma Chi fraternity, founded in 1855, is one of the "Miami Triad" along with Phi Delta Theta and Beta Theta Pi. It now has 101 chapters and a membership of about 35,000. (Phyleans The petitioning group consisted of the former Beta Kappas and Trimoiras) and Phi Chi Alphas. The home of the M. S. C. Sigma Chi con tinues at 729 East Grand the former home of the Phyleans and Beta Kappas. river, The installation ceremonies, held in the Union Memorial building were attended by officers and members of the Sigma Chi fraternity and by members of the petitioning group. Fifty-six alumni re turned for initiation and 20 others who could not return plan to be initiated later or at another chapter. Among those re turning from out of the State were the '31, following: Reynold G. Anschutz, '40, Willoughby, Ohio; Anton Busser, (Skinny) Auburn, Indiana; Warren E. '20, Tarzana, California; DeYoung, Ralph B. Kling, '20, Baltimore, Mary land; and Thomas J. Nicol, '18, Louis ville, Kentucky. The faculty is well represented in the new Sigma Chi chapter with 19 members as follows: Lt. Col. Edward A. Banning, field artillery; Lauren P. Brown, '31, education; Donald Cation, physical botany; Francis C. Dittrich, Jr. '36, physical education; Henry B. Dirks, dean of engineering; Marshall Goodwin, '34, Coral Gables, Florida; E. B. Hill, '15, head of farm management; R. C. Huston, dean of applied science; Ray Hutson, head of entomology; W. LeRoy Mailman, '18, bacteriology; Fred T. Mitchell, dean of men; Walter F. Morofsky, '27, en tomology; Thomas H. Osgood, head of physics; John A. Ramsey, modern lan guage; Joseph W. Stack, zoology; Ives '25, soils; Henrik J. Staf J. Stafford, seth, '17, bacteriology; Forrest C. Strong, '24, botany; and Robert L. Sweet, chem ical engineering. The initiation of the 38 active mem bers of the petitioning group into Sigma Chi was in charge of Alpha Pi chapter from Albion. The initiation of the 56 alumni was directed by Theta Theta chapter from the University of Mich igan. The installation banquet, held in the Union Memorial Building Ball room, was attended by 201 persons. The Gamma Psi Alumni association of Sigma Chi was formed at the close of the banquet and the following officers were elected: Elton B. Hill, '15, presi dent; Ronald C. Hess, '29, vice president; and Ralph N. Wright, '23, secretary- treasurer. WKAR Highlights "Cavalcade of America" plays will be broadcast over the Dramatic Workshop the Air program on WKAR every of Thursday afternoon to 5, Paul Bagwell, head of the speech de partment, announced. from 4:30 Only the most popular plays in "Caval cade" will be broadcast with student casts directed by Joe A. Callaway, assist ant professor of speech. the half-hour to present dramatic series came from DuPont com pany, sponsors of the national network program. Permission band Tire conservation and gasoline ration State ing have prompted Michigan College's director, Prof. Roy Underwood, head of the department of music, to take band clinics to Michigan high schools through the college radio station, WKAR. Begun February 2, the clinic has received an excellent response, Underwood stated, and letters from throughout Michigan indicate that an increasing number of high school band directors are calling their students' attention to it. The clinic will continue for a series of 18 weeks, broadcasting band pro from grams every Tuesday afternoon, 5:45 to 6 o'clock, to acquaint high school directors and band members with selec tions from a national festival compositions played on a competitive their basis by secondary music festival each spring. schools at list of Other radio highlights of interest to alumni are "From the Alumni Record", every Tuesday afternoon at 5:30 and "College Newrs", every Monday after noon at 2:15. If you desire a complete schedule of radio programs write to Di rector R. J. Coleman. F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 9 His Achievements Live Carl F. Siglin, 38 of Carl F. Siglin, The death in North Africa, November 26, '38, Detroit, brought to light that this M. S. C. grad uate was the "unidentified field major", described by his comrades as the "brav est man in the American army." 17370 Wildemere Avenue. The Siglins have two children Carl, 22 months old, and David, seven months old. Major Siglin was in the first Amer ican wave to land in Africa, November to major 8, 1942, and was promoted shortly thereafter for showing "leader ship in action". Mrs. Siglin, in writing to the alumni office recently, stated, "Carl's last letter, dated November 17, contained I am a the postscript—'Incidentally, major as of November 15.' Not one word more as to how he earned his promotion. I had already heard the news over the radio, November 24, and had seen him in a newsreel on the nights of November 25 and 26." '10, city Carl Siglin had a host of friends who knew him in East Tawas, in college, in his Delta Sigma fraternity, in his CCC work, and later as an associate of C. E. Smith, forester of Detroit. Some of these close friends wrote letters following Carl's death to Detroit papers. They wrote poignant letters about a gal lant young man they knew — two of which appeared in Malcolm W. Bingay's "Good Morning" column. Friends Of the Library Michigan State college is developing for an organization known as plans "Friends of the Library." Bravest in Army," Record of Siglin Numerous newspaper accounts in De troit and throughout Michigan carried ihe Associated Press dispatch from the African front quoting Sergeant Henry Furowski, of Akron, in praise of his major from Detroit who led an attack in which 12 German tanks were destroyed while the Americans lost only four. "The major, a tank-unit commander, won high tribute from the sergeant for defying heavy enemy fire to bring back a wounded soldier in a night battle of November 25. It was impossible to send a tank for the wounded soldier, because of the heavy danger of running over him in the darkness. "Subsequently the major, now known to be Carl Siglin — was fatally wounded while directing a light tank in an at tack on a German position. Sergeant Michael Swarte, of Philadelphia, re moved him back from the line of fire, too badly but hurt to recover." the Major already was Siglin, 32 years old, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Simon G. Siglin, of East Tawas, Michigan. After graduating as s landscape architect, he became com manding officer of a CCC camp at Gray ling, Michigan, in 1939. On June 3, 1939, Siglin was married '37, of Detroit, to Virginia Van Atter, where she is living with her parents at 10 . . . T HE R E C O RD is at present studying A committee, headed by Luther H. Baker, president of Mills Mutual insur ance company and a graduate of M.S.C. in 1893, the Friends of the Library movement as in 34 conducted states. He is assisted by Dean Kelley. president of the Michigan Bar associa tion, Lansing. Ernest L. Anthony, dean of agriculture, Glen O. Stewart, direc tor of alumni relations, and Jackson E. Towne, college librarian. in 100 other colleges Back of the movement, stated Presi dent John A. Hannah, is the desire of Michigan State college to provide alumni and friends with an opportunity to con tribute gifts and rare collections of books, and periodicals to the college library in need of expansion to keep pace with the growth of Michigan State. Opportunity for membership to the organization will be given to alumni and friends. War Posters "War Posters Today" from nine Unit ed Nations are being shown this month in the art gallery of the Michigan State college Music building. The most artistic posters in the col lection of 48 come from Spain, China, Russia, and Mexico. Grim humor, pathos, and satire are the theme elements of posters from these countries. Ferocious captions and caricatures urge complete the defeat of Fascism and denounce and methods of Axis leaders in carrying war to women and children. England, Canada the United States vary the meaning behind their posters, stressing victory, safety, pro duction, and bond buying at will. The Netherlands and Czechoslovakia present the feelings of occupied countries toward the Axis conquerors in their displays. Phi Kappa Phi Initiates 29 Seniors Twenty-nine senior students and seven faculty members have been selected for initiation into the Michigan State col lege chapter of Phi Kappa Phi, national honor society. Phi Kappa Phi selects members on the basis of high intellect ual accomplishments. Initiates from the engineering division are Robert J. Coates, Royal Oak; Rich ard F. George, Muskegon Heights; Karl Kilgren, Cadillac; George S. Lipka. Lorain, Ohio; Richard W. Mangrum. Durand; Jerold K. Topliff, Eaton Rap ids; Wayne N. Wilcox, East Lansing; William A. Bradley, Kenneth D. Cooley, Gerald D. Gilmore, and Robert F. Latter, from Lansing. Liberal arts initiates are Joanne M. Bauman, Traverse City; Margaret A. Burhans, Paw Paw; Sherman E. Clark, Detroit; Samuel W. Keith, Sawyer; Jean M. Legg, Detroit; Mabel P. Loew, Hol land; and Richard F. Bauerle, Merry L. Pinkham, and Barbara Lu Mabie, from Lansing. Initiates Robert Craig, Mori-ice; Jean B. DuFrain. Pontiac; and Susanne E. Gage, Clayton, are students in the ap plied science division. The agricultural division is represent ed by Milton H. Erdmann, Iron Moun tain; and Robert K. Hudson, Wyanet, Illinois. Representing home economics is Evelyn Wanhainen, South Range. Initiates Raymond I. Beebe, Fremont; Dorothy and Harris D. Webster, Lansing, are students in the veterinary science division. J. Hitchcock, Lansing; Faculty instructor initiates are Dr. Russel B. Nye, in English; Dr. Terrill Stevens, assistant professor of forestry; Dr. Everett T. Wilmers, assistant pro fessor of mathematics; Dr. Walter R. Fee, associate professor of history; Dr. Fred T. Mitchell, dean of men and pro fessor of education; Dr. George Trout, professor of dairy husbandry; and Bruce Hartsuch, associate professor of chem istry. William Warren Brandt, Lansing ap plied science junior, has been selected by Phi Kappa Phi as the student best fitted to receive the organization's soph omore scholarship award of $50. This award is given annually to the student, who, during his sophomore year, attains the highest point average and has shown personal characteristics which develop into a high quality of citizenship. ^ "* M. S. 6. Men Cited jo* Wat JletxribHi, the Jap-held other high honor, the Silver Star. This award was for a photographic mission over island of Amboina. Flying at 9,500 feet his crew obtained valuable pictures and, in making an escape, successfully fled from three Jap Zero planes which apparently turned back because they didn't have enough fuel. One Zero plane tried hard to at tack, missing Jimmy's ship by about 10 feet. The tail gunner's of Gibb's ship shot off a wing of the Zero plane and it fell to its doom. since graduating "Flying is the first job I have really liked from Lansing Eastern in 1934," Gibb told his parents and friends, and "some day I would like to have my own flying school. I don't know what my next assignment will be, but I would prefer experimentation in combat flying". Among his other com ments were a few words about his "crew". He told how the ties between members of the bomber team are tighter than those of nearly any other organiza in the world. The importance of tion navigation, without which the big "forts" cannot hit their objectives, was told by Jimmy when he described reconnais sance missions over the Celebes, New the Solo Guinea, mons. "We were in the 'soup' on many reckoning," occasions, flying by dead said time, the youthful airman. "One on the way out to Australia, we resort ed to dead reckoning over 900 miles without sighting land. We hit our next landing spot right on the nose, thanks to the navigator." the Philippines and Captain Gibb for Idaho, accompanied by his January 3 left Pocatello, wife and infant daughter. the mainland after four and one-half inches, was one of the to reach Pearl first American airmen Harbor the from disastrous Jap attack on December 7, 1941. Jimmy and his crew were soon ordered to Australia where he served under command of Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur after the fall of the Philippines. It was 1,700 miles from Gibb's air base in Australia to a place in the Phil ippines where his bomber crew was sent to evacuate government and military officials. The trip of 3,400 two-way miles was made in 33 hours, 30 of which were spent in the air. Leaving Australia in the afternoon, the bomber successfully carried out the important mission. Other bombers of the same squadron had rescued General Mac Arthur, President Manuel Quezon of the Philippines and others. Gibb's most prominent passenger was the vice pres ident of the islands. "That night was the blackest and longest I have ever known", Gibb de clared. "There was a solid, black cloud ceiling above us and heavy, rough clouds trip we poured below. On the return water on our heads and slapped our faces to keep awake. We finally in an Australian desert when our gas supply was exhausted, and spent a day there before being found". landed Gibb, who loves to fly, received an War front dispatches singled out from daily news stories (as well as official welcomes given heroes as they returned that Michigan indicate safely home) State men are participating in signifi cant actions. Among those recently given national recognition were Lt. Douglas Mac Don ald, w'42, son of Sheriff and Mrs. Allan A. Mac Donald of Mason, Michigan, awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross last August for his participation in the aerial rescue of army ferrying pilots stranded on the ice-cap of interior Green land last June; Capt. James Gibb, Jr., w'38, of Lansing, who in addition to his 407 hours of combat flying assisted in the rescue mission which brought Gen eral Mac Arthur and Philippine officials safely out of the Philippines; Robert Zant, '39, of Grand Rapids, received the Distinguished Flying Cross, January 4. at Cairo, from Brig. Gen. Patrick Tim- berlake, chief of the American bomber command in the middle east, in recogni successful tion of his planning the enemy; and Capt. Leon Williamson, '39, of Tecumseh, former varsity swimmer, given the Distinguished Flying Cross for meritorious achievement with the Marine Air Corps. leadership and flight against in aerial A portion of the inside story of the brotherhood of the air was told in Lan sing during the recent holiday season by James A. Gibb, Jr., with the class of 1938. He was home to visit his wife, the former Patricia Mc Guire, and their nine-months'-old daughter, Jamie Ann, whose acquaintance he was making for the first time. and in Capt. James A. Gibb, Jr., with 407 combat flying hours in a huge Boeing to his credit, was ac Flying Fortress companied to the alumni office on De cember 30, by his father, James A. Gibb, Sr., manager of the Inter City bus lines. The father proudly displayed his son's the Distinguished Flying Cross Silver Star for heroic actions the Pacific war theater. Extremely modest about his own accomplishments, which include cruisers, two Jap to the alumni Captain Gibb described office staff some of this varied expe riences. Jimmy piloted the great bomb er through ack-ack fire from anti-air craft guns and fought it out with Zero and Messerschmitt attacking planes, but never once did he have a single hit scored against his ship—a record that gives him highest honors in the nations' air force. blasting Young Gibb, who stands but five feet Capt. James A. Gibb, Jr., w'38, winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Silver '17, Star for heroic action in the Pacific war theater, describes modestly his 407 combat flying hours. to Glen O. Stewart, F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 11 three major last year, letter winners but has four minor letter men available and expects a fair team. Don Krushak, Lyle Burdy, Charles Sherman and Mor ris Shepherd will be his dependables. Swimming The swimming team has been plow ing some rough waters. Coach Charles McCaffree lost several prospective stars then Charles on scholastic counts and Bigelow, best stroker, fractured an elbow and was lost for the season. He is de pending heavily on sophomores. Johnny Nichols, from Jackson, has the makings of the best distance swimmer State has ever had. He was six seconds under the varsity record in the 440-yard free style when placing second in the Ohio State meet. Captain Harold Heffernan, free styler, and Ralph Newton, senior free- styler, are the veterans. Newton holds the varsity record in the 100-yard event. He was the team's only winner in the meet with Ohio State, tak the 50-free. Bob Knox is a good ing sophomore breast stroker and Harry Cooley, the latter another Jackson boy. promises to be a first class back-stroker. Larry Luoto, veteran diver, also was lost to the team with the start of the winter quarter. the best of Track junior. Some of Coach Karl Schlademan, of the track the team, is inclined to think he has best "depth" on his team this year that has been his fortune since coming to State. He has two top-notch performers in Jim Milne, varsity record holder in the high jump at 6 ft. 6% in., and Bill Scott who did 4:19.2 last winter when a the probable point winners are: Bob McCarthy, Hugh Davis, Bob Bodoh, sprints; Dale Kaulitz. Art Dehn, John Stevens, 440; John Liggett. Jim Fraser, Earl Cody, Captain Scott, distances; Ted Wonch, Roy Dygert, Bill Roberts, pole vault; Sid Brecher, Art Hagre, shot; Wayne Lesher, Bud Fenton, broadjump; Milne, high jump. There is a notable lack of strength in the two- mile. Baseball the the extent of Athlete and coach alike are waiting for word on intercol legiate competition under the army pro gram that is expected to be instituted on spring the campus starting with term. It is not known how much will be available for athletic competition. Coach John Kobs is going ahead with baseball plans, inasmuch as several of his veteran players are in the Navy re serve and will remain here until June, at is great uncertainty, however. Every effort will be made to carry through the letter. the Army plans to least. There Potent Punchers The Zurahowskis—two of them face you, but one at a time in the fighting ring is more than most opponents can stand. The one with his hair mussed is Walter. The slick looking twin is Team Captain Bill. They represent two potent punchers on Coach Al Kawal's boxing team. Coming from Richmond, Michigan, the twins are following an agricultural course. Review of Sports losing heavily At least one member of the Michigan State college coaching faculty is having a hard time smiling these winter days. Coach Ben Van Alstyne of the basket ball squad is having one of those years that turns coaches' hair gray. Largely through to graduation and some ineligibilities which were not the producer of given any publicity, found court winners for himself surrounded by a large assort ment of mediocre and inexperienced this season. That basketball material is the real explanation for the seven straight defeats State suffered before finally winning a game from Dearborn Naval Training Station, 55 to 24. the Spartans Even though he knew in advance he would lack experience sadly this year, the schedule consisted of the usual array of major attractions. And, to the team's credit, it must be said the results haven't been lop-sided. In almost every instance State has given the opposition plenty to losing. The worry about even when games were interesting and nobody felt like apologizing after any of them. The games with two of the strongest service teams in the country, Great Lakes and Camp Grant, were thrillers. Three sophomores have come along to help out. Danny Pjesky, Jack Cawood and Albert Peppier have improved tre mendously started. the Fred Stone, really the team's only vet season since 12 . . . T HE R E C O RD eran, was stiicken with illness midway of the season, as was Nick Hashu and Roy Deihl, a pair of better than aver age reserves on last year's team. Wrestling in All other sports are going full blast. Coach Fendley Collins walked out an other powerful wrestling team for its first dual meet of the season and stop ped Michigan, 16-14, the opening match. The Jennings twins, Merle and Burl, and Bill Maxwell, all of Tulsa, Okla., are reigning national champions. They form the heart of the team. State should make serious bid for the N.C.A.A. championship again this year. They have placed two years be for runner-up hind Oklahoma A. & M. Boxing Coach Al Kawal, varsity line coach in football, took the boxing team into the east for a three-meet trip early in February. He has a strong fighter in Captain Bill Zurakowski at 120 pounds, and in Charles Calkins, 165-pounder, a boy who went the finals N.C.A.A. tournament last year. the in to Fencing Fencing is coming along with a green lost team. Coach Charles Schmitter 10-Year Record In Football Michigan State College football teams have played representative schedules in the last 10 years. The Spartans have en gaged 25 different opponents who came from all sections of the country. Coach Charley Bachman's teams have appeared at Boston, New York, and Philadelphia on the eastern seaboard, at San Fran cisco, Los Angeles and Spokane in the far west and at Miami in the south. Over the period the Spartans have won 52, lost 26, and tied eight games for a .667 winning percentage. Most Valuable Richard N. Kieppe, popular halfback on the Spartan 1942 football team, was the recipient of the Governor of Michi the annual gan Award, at football banquet, held the Union ballroom, in December 12. "Dick," who lives in Lansing, became the 12th Spartan to be voted the most valuable to his team by fellow senior letter men at the close of the season. The award, a handsome gold watch appropriately inscribed with the signa ture of the state, is always given at the close of the annual football banquet sponsored by the Cen tral Michigan Alumni club and the Lansing Junior Chamber of Commerce. the governor of This year 350 people attended with about 30 high representatives schools as guests of alumni. from "Lost Company" three of "Lost Company" Four former Michigan State college students, them athletes, are cited for bravery among the ranks of the from western Michigan who held out for three weeks in a desperate jungle battle with Jap forces in New Guinea, in the south-west pacific conflicts. Only one has been reported killed in the action that found the 367-man com pany of the 32nd infantry division held for over 15 days in ambush surrounded by Japanese troops. Capt. Roger Keast, letterman at three-sport '34, Lansing, M.S.C., was killed in action attacking a roadway position during the ambush. In the early days of the "Lost Com pany's" fight out of the ambush, Cap tain Keast, along with Capt. John Shir ley, of Grand Rapids, decided the only way out of the isolated position was a direct attack on Jap troops holding the roadway position. Keast and Shirley led the infantry force across the road M S. C. Athletic Schedule Ojflf-GcvMfuti. ZuetUb Sport Opponent Place Date Fri., Sat., Sat., Mon. F-S, Sat., Sat., Sat., Sat., F-S, Th-S F-S, F-S, Sat, Sat., Feb. Feb. Feb. , Mar Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. , Mai- Mar. Mar. Mar. May Wrestling Wrestling Fencing Swimming Wrestling Boxing Wrestling 26 27 27 1 5-6 6... 13 13 20 19-20 Wrestling . 25-27....Boxing 26-27 26-27 27 15 Swimming Fencing Track Polo ..Track Track Indiana Purdue Chicago and Wisconsin Illinois Inter-State meet _._W. Va. university Michigan Illinois Tech. relays Chicago Daily News relays National Collegiate National Collegiate National Collegiate National Collegiate Purdue relays Ohio State Bloomington, Ind. Lafayette, Ind. Chicago, 111. Champaign, 111. Cleveland, Ohio Morgantown, W. Va. Ann Arbor Chicago, 111. Chicago, 111. Madison, Wis. Columbus, Ohio Lafayette, Ind. Columbus, Ohio cM-ame Qve+iti Date Sat.. Feb. 27... F-S, Mar. 5-6. 6... Sat., Mar. 6... Sat., Mar. 13... Sat., Mar. Sat., Mar. 13 Sport Basketball Track Swimming Polo Boxing Fencing. Opponent Notre Dame Central Conference Bowling Green Culver Military academy Bucknell ...Marquette Jap into way entrenchments where American bayonet fighting soon elimi nated Jap I'esistance at this point. Other former Spartans in the action were Capt. Peter DalPonte, '39, of Three Rivers, baseball hurler in 1938-39; Sgt. Robert Devereaux, w'41, of Grand Rapids, numeral winner in baseball and football in 1939; and Lt. John J. Filarski, w'31, of Jackson, who attended Michi gan State in 1927-28. In the attack Sergeant Devereaux was cited as one of the bravest men in action. Devereaux, like many of his comrades, suffered from malaria contracted during the hot, wet jungle fighting. Devereaux tempera in action until his continued ture reached 106 degrees. He was then evacuated over trail back to the main lines. the rough jungle Captain DalPonte led a supply mis sion over the perilous jungle trail to the isolated "island" of infantrymen during the toughest days of fighting and found himself in charge of the ambushed gar rison upon arrival. Jap fire had thinned the company's ranks of all ranking offi cers leaving the command to DalPonte. Keeping the "Lost Company" supplied with food was among the most danger ous jobs of the campaign, because the supply trains were constantly under enemy fire in their movements through the jungle. Lieutenant Filarski, supply officer of led many of these supply missions during the fight ing. the company, Prof. Cade Retires Professor C. M. Cade, '07, was grant the State retirement by ed disability Board of Agriculture on January 1. A member of the faculty for 30 years. Professor Cade came to Michigan State as an instructor in civil engineering in 1913. Other positions held by Cade were instructor at Purdue university in 1907 and 1908 and field officer in the U. S. Coast and Geodetic survey from 1908 to 1914. Professor Cade's disability retire ment gives him an opportunity to return to State as soon as health permits. F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 13 i-JT f These students of 1885-86 look as if they were ready for their work in "practical agriculture". This photo graph was recently presented to the college by Howard E. Cowles, '16, from the collection of his father, the late Frank R. Cowles, w'89. This picture of "gun-toting" coeds was taken about Can you tell us the year and. also, who are the 1920. persons? Days of Yore u+toatt The youth with the firm grasp basketball is L. L. Frimodig, '17. '16 squad are: (first row, left to '17, and 17, Arthur R. Sheffield, (middle row, left to right) C. P. Miller, '20, Frimodig, Wm. Wood, McClellan, row) are: George E. Gauthier, '14, Oscar R. Miller, w'15. (deceased). The '17 on the "1916"-labeled Other members of the right) Charles Hood. Fred S. Ricker, '16; Rigby, w'19, Carl F. w'19, and Albert R. coaching (back staff John F. Macklin, and Just a half-century ago this spring, members of the Class of 1893 bade their Alma Mater good bye. Plans are now being perfected by Alumni Secretary Stewart for their class reunion. This photograph, which was taken outside College hall, was loaned us by Ed Peters, '93, of Saginaw. A class in woodworking was provided for women 1912. Here are several co-eds of that year at work the basement of Morrill hall). former Woman's building the in in (now NEWS Alout lUeie Alumni (Continued from Page 6) 1909 C. W. Mason has resumed for the duration his Institute of Tech is assistant pro teaching work at Carnegie nology, Pittsburgh, where he fessor of physchology and education. 1910 William Emby White is the new director of in Col is from the war area Texas Forrest service with headquarters lege Station. 1911 The Charles Collingwood frequently mentioned in news broadcasts the oldest son of G. Harris Collingwood, National in Lumber Manufacturers association executive Washington, D.C., and grandson of late '85, of Lansing. Judge Charles B. Collingwood, Dr. Charles N. Frey, research specialist with the Fleischmann Laboratories in New York city, recently wrote stating: "The death of Dr. Eben Mumford was a great I was associated with him loss to the college. during his early days and I know how much he did for the movement of educating the farm in ers spiring leader and had the ability to make warm friends." scientific agriculture. He was an to President Hannah the in 1912 for Leo R. Binding, the past the Libby-Owens Glass several years connected with com pany in Toledo, died in that city on September S. His wife, two sisters survive. two daughters, mother, and A. D. Badour is senior site planning architect the Federal Housing authority with offices for at 201 N. Wells street. Chicago. George W. Cushing is new editor for radio station WJR in the Fisher building, Detroit. Wilbur Gardner is borough clerk ington, New Jersey, where he Stewart street. for Wash lives at 91 W. Verne Ketchum, chief engineer Structures Inc., of Portland, Oregon, arily located in New York city at vania hotel. for Timber tempor the Pennsyl is in travels have I. J. Westerveld, whose taken him the opposite direction of East Lansing from class and whose business has kept him reunions, reports: "Wausau, Wisconsin, has been 'home' for twenty-three years where C. W. Par sons and myself have operated a concrete pipe plant all of time. The years have done to us such as whitened our heads and things there have been com enlarged our middles but pensations happiness beyond our desserts." success and in material that 1913 Her countless friends and classmates will be grieved to learn that Eulalia Belle Alger, assist leader of home demonstrations agents ant state for the University of California, died in Berkeley on No vember 15. Miss Al ger joined the home demonstration staff in 1930 after teach ing home economics in Flint, Michigan, and Tacoma, Wash ington, high schools, and eight serving years on the exten the sion at staff State College of Washington. Upon service Miss the home demonstration Eulalia Belle Alger entering to San Diego county where Alger was assigned she became especially interested the avocado, in not only for its food value but its economic im portance as a crop. Her entire eleven years in San Diego were devoted to the teaching of meth ods making for better homes and better living. the position she In 1941 she was promoted held until her death. In 1934-35 Miss Alger was president of the National Business and pro fessional Women of San Diego, and the follow ing year was president of the Kappa Alpha Theta alumnae two chapter. She brothers and two sisters. 1914 survived by to is their Lenore Nixon Johnson and her husband, of Lincoln, Nebraska, were on the campus Novem ber 25 visiting a freshman 1915 Word has been received of the death of Retta in Hadley, Michigan, on Octo in the hotel administration course. son, William Nixon, Johnson Hartwig ber 6. is employed by Arthur C. Lytle the U. S. Army Engineers as chief reviewing appraiser in land acquisition for the War department. He and Mrs. Lytle (Myrtle Rogers, '22) live at 17 South Randall avenue. Madison. Wisconsin. 1919 Elmer Way is assistant acid superintendent for in Williamsport, the U. S. Rubber company Pennsylvania, where he lives at 911 First avenue. Lt. Jane Piatt, '30 As regimental mess officer the 2nd regi the WAAC at Des Moines, Iowa. Lt. '30, now has charge of feeding 2,600 is the first officer three halls. She ment of Jane Piatt, women in of her rank to hold such a position. for from After in Detroit. In 1942 she leaving college Lt. Piatt continued her science studies at the University of Chicago and Merrill-Palmer received the University of her master's degree Michigan. For 10 years she operated the Jane in Lansing. She was Piatt Country Day school a member of in college. She joined the WAAC's in July of 1942 and in August, and another promotion to second officer during she was the Christmas holidays when home visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. How ard Piatt, 1462 Cambridge road, Lansing. the Alpha Chi Omega sorority received a commission of third officer 1920 Howard Hoffman is located Wisconsin, as assistant sales manager Louis Allis company. in Milwaukee, the for 1921 A. D. and Marguerite Beck Martin are located on a 740 acre farm near Oakfield, New York, and the U. S. Gypsum company, owner of part of the land, recently gave "Abe" honorable men tion on his outstanding work in farming. He is the Genesee County Farm, Home, president of for 1943. The Martins have and 4-H bureaus two children, Patricia, a sophomore medical bi ology student at Michigan State, and Jack, a sopohomore in high school. 1922 George R. Phillips, of the U. S. Forest service in Washington, D. C, is the donor of a scholar to be given at the College's All Ag ship award Honor banquet to the forestry student with the highest scholastic average. 1923 Hester Bradley - - she has been James in the drafted in Bath, and her Couzens Agricultural School group of students working in nearby beet fields pulled 35 tons in three days. Miss Bradley has the distinction of being the only woman Smith- Hughes teacher that teach agriculture in the state. reports to Ralph Wright is president of the B. A. Faunce lives at Inc., of East Lansing, and Company 418 Rosewood. 1924 L. Miller Andrus is assistant chief at the U. in Richmond. Virginia, where S. Patent office he lives at 1418 Nottoway avenue. Theodore Frank recently became minister of the Trinity Congregational church in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. This follows a ten year pastorate in the "oldest Congre in Windsor, Connecticut, gational church with a continuous history in America." 1925 Henrietta Edgeeumbe is dietitian at the Mercy hospital in Benton Harbor, Michigan. for L. H. Nagler recently became administrative the Eastern Aircraft division of engineer General Motors is in Linden, New Jersey. He living in Westfield. New Jersey, at 508 Dorian court. Industries Corrine Ormiston White is assistant 4-H club leader for the college and lives in East Lansing at 447 Grove street. Ewald Schaffer in Ypsilanti, Mich is located igan, as general manager of the Tucker Aviation Inc.. of New division of Higgins Orleans. 1927 Kenneth Bordine is superintendent of the Paw Paw Training school and associate director of for Western Michigan College teacher of Education in Kalamazoo. He and Mrs. Bor dine (Nellie Ingalls) and their two children are living in Paw Paw. training supervisor the lives in North- for William Rossow is farm Detroit House of Correction and ville at 241 Rayson. 1928 Donald and Katherine (McKee. '36) Anderson, of 214 S. Gremps, Paw Paw, Michigan, an nounce the birth of Judith Irene on November 29. '29) Bradley (Mulvena, the birth of Sally Jean on September living near Springport. Ferris and Dorothy announce 19. The Bradleys are Michigan. Lt. W. Clare Ennis, U. S. Navy research analyst at pany in Beverly Hills at 9937-C Durant drive. in Santa Monica, California. He is is the Douglas Aircraft com living retired, F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 15 1929 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rea (Margaret Allen) of 631 S. State street, Caro, announce the birth of a daughter Mary Ellen. She the grand daughter of Austin Rea of Hillman. Michigan, and of Mrs. Mary Kyes Allen of South Lyons, both members of the class of 1903. is their farms institutional Alden Orr has resigned as assistant agricul the State College of Wash farm in Wash '30) in Olympia tural economist for ington to accept a position as supervising manager of state ington. He and Mrs. Orr (Dorothy Holden, and at 323 E. 15th street. 1930 Donald Stauffer recently became superintendent the of state parks in Oklahoma, with offices State Capitol building in Oklahoma City. two children are living: in in D. A. Watkins continues industrial gas engineering and sales work for Consumers Power company but has been transferred from Lansing to Pontiac. 1931 Theodore Foster is a special agent the F.K.I.. and he and Mrs. Foster (Winogene Rayner. w'35) in East Lansing at 339 Kensington road. live for in public is engaged James Haskins relations work with Carl Byoir & Associates. 10 E. 40th street. New York city. 1932 Harry J. Skornia is director of radio programs at Indiana university, Bloomington. the Southeastern Pipe Line Alan C. Nelson is chief chemist and dispatcher for in Atlanta. Georgia, where he lives at 670 Longwood drive. N.W. Florence Swanson and Gregory Dolgorukov were married on August 22 and are making their home in Washington, D.C.. at 1619 Rhode Island N.W. 1933 Elizabeth Baker for in child welfare the Virginia State Department of Public Welfare, and may be reached at Abingdon Academy in Abingdon. Virginia. is area consultant Kenneth Clark is metallurgist at the Naval Research laboratory in Washington. D.C. Virginia Day and Frederick R. Bufe were married on June 20 and are making their home at 615 Orchard street. Wyandotte. Michigan. Howard Harvey is assistant field director in the the military and naval welfare service of American Red Cross, and may be reached through his home address of 125 Robertson street, Cadillac, Michigan. Andrew McElroy recently completed a success to his assignment ful flight via ferry command with General Motors, India Ltd.. Bombay. Mr. and Mrs. Watson Spoelstra (Jean Murphy) the birth of of 14678 Forrer, Detroit, announce a son, Jon W.. on June 19. 1934 Mr. and Mrs Raymond W. Wright (Eleanor Barr) announce the birth of Sheila Rae on August 24. The Wrights are living at 428 E. River street, Spring Lake, Michigan. Helen Densmore Becker (Mrs. E. V. M.) gives her new address as 590 Vreeland road. Route 2. Ypsilanti, and third child. Jay Densmore Becker, on October 4. the birth of reports their A daughter, Linda Louise, was born October 28 to Mr. and Mrs. George J. Pipper, (Viola Martens) of 10074 Lincoln drive. Huntington Woods, Michigan. Charles Sawyer writes for Libby, McNeill & Libby on from Haiku, Maui. Hawaii: "I have recently taken a job as office manager the island of Maui. We raise and can approximately one million cases of pineapple a year. My family two and a half years consists of a daughter I am kept very old and a boy ten months old. 16 . . . T HE R E C O RD a graduate student at Business Administration achusetts. the Harvard School of in Cambridge, Mass for is vice president Paul J. Murdoch in charge the American Paint company of production in Chicago. He and Mrs. Murdoch and their adopted son and daughter, Douglas and Joyce, live at 2525 Hutchinson street. Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Roelofs (Norine Aldrich, '41) of 170 N. Cedar, Manistique, Michigan, an nounce the birth of a son. Terry Dean, on No vember 3. Eleanor Schmidt Dorstewitz and her husband and daughter have moved to Paw Paw, Michigan, where they live at 210 St. Joseph street. corporation Neil VanDyke, material control supervisor at in St. Laister-Kauffmann Aircraft the birth of a daughter Louis, Missouri, reports on October 24. He also that Wilbur Moehring is process engineer in the same plant. 1937 Leocadia August is the Englewood hospital therapeutic dietitian in Chicago, Illinois. in physics at Robert Bessey is instructor reports the at Univeristy of Idaho at Moscow. Philip and Vada (Robinson, w'39) Getzinger end their small daughter, Gayle Jean, are living at 20 Lois avenue, Brooklyn, New York, where Captain Getzinger is stationed with the army. the class, is associate plant pathologist for Idaho Agricural Experiment station Glenn KenKnight, who received his M.S. with the in Moscow. is dean of women at James Fredrica Morse town college, Jamestown, North Dakota. John and Bonnietta Miller Straw are living Indiana, is assistant professor of mathematics at 2637 Fenwood avenue. Terre Haute. where he at Rose Polytechnic Institute. living (Brown, research assistant George and Gladys '39) Wellington announce the birth of Earl Crosby on September in El Reno. 27. The Wellingtons are Oklahoma, while Lt. Wellington stationed is at the Quartermaster depot at Fort Reno. Louis Wiesner war planning for tions, 45 East 65th street. New York city. at in post is the Council on Foreign Rela the Chaplain School headquarters at Harvard Uni versity, Cambridge. Massachusetts. 1938 Captain Victor E. and Marian Beardsley Schem- ber, of Mather Field, Sacramento. California, announce the birth of a daughter, Susan Jane, on October 17. James Williams may reached be John McKibbin in in nutrition at Harvard Medical school is research biochemist and structor in Boston. teaches Wilda Morgan institutional manage ment at Rhode Island State college at Kingston. Jane Albee writes that she is a geodetic aide under the engineers of the War department and is "doing geodetic computations in the office of the the International Boundaries commission of United States, Canada, and Alaska." She lives in Washington avenue N.W. at 1332 Massachusetts Constance Blake'y and Frank J. Casale were married on August 15. They are making their home at 124 N. New Hampshire, Los Angeles, the Pacific where Mrs. Casale Coast personnel manager for Sears. Roebuck and company. is assistant to Florence Digby is assistant children's librarian in Battle Creek where she at the public library lives at 143 N. Broad. Lt. (jg) Quentin A. Ewert and his wife, the former Frances Norfleet of Lansing, marked first wedding anniversary on Christmas their Day. Lt. Ewert the U. S. Naval Air station is in Bermuda. located at the University of Minnesota Kay Foster received her M. S. in psychometrics from in December 1941 and the following January 17 became Mrs. William Barnfield. They are making their home at 5132 Waterman. St. Louis. Missouri, where Lt. Donna Werback, '30 Lt. Donna Werback. '30. was one of a care to fully selected group of 16 WAAC's officers start a comprehensive nine weeks' course on Feb ruary 8. in the U. S. Army command, General Staff school. Ft. Leavenworth. Kansas. This spe cial course deals with the service of supply di vision of the army, and the young officers who to direct complete the course will be qualified thousands of women soldiers working to supply the men in the field. a completed Lt. Werback. whose home is at 900 Wildwood secretarial drive, East Lansing, course after leaving Michigan State in 1930 and worked with her father in the Lansing Colorplate company. Later she became office secretary and investment auditor with Donovan and Gilbert, the brokers Alpha Chi Omega sorority in Lansing. She was a member of in college. the to my in addition invasion or job I am helping trouble with any of busy, to train a company of home guards for use in event of local Japanese. If there are any former State students in to get in touch with 1935 Morris B. Hughes the army stationed here we would them." is assistant horticulturist at Louisiana State university and lives in Baton Rouge at 361 DuBois drive. like Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hurd Mary Lou Seeley is an army dietitian at the Fitzsimons General hospital in Denver, Colorado. (Adine Lynch) of the birth son. Joseph Patrick, on No 824 W. 7th, Traverse City, announce of their vember 21. second Josephine Widmeyer Hutchison (Mrs. Frank E.) in is head dietitian at the Ohio Valley hospital Steubenville, Ohio. 1936 Maurine Christopher and Chester C. Choate were married September 17 and are making their home near Olympia, Washington, R. 5. Box 117. Sgt. Choate is stationed at the Olympia airport. Marianna Halbert is a school cafeteria manager in Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania, where she lives in the Aberdeen apartments at 4628 Bayard street. Cpl. Richard Williams and Lucille Halladay '38, were married at Macon, Michigan, on Octo ber 31. Cpl. Williams the Signal school at Fort Mon Corps Officers Training mouth, New Jersey, and Mrs. Williams is con tinuing her work in O.P.A. price ceilings with the J. W. Knapp company in Lansing. is attending Lawrence Hutchinson, former the College central stenographic department, supervisor of is Dr. Barnfield ogy at dentistry. teaches bacteriology and pathol school of the Washington University Mr. and Mrs. Howard Grant, of 1911 Col the birth of Martha chester, Flint, announce Elizabeth on September 13. Helen Holbrook and Robert Dean Spence, who in 1942, were married on received his M.S. living at 8 Lancaster, Cam June 14 and are is mathe bridge, Massachusetts. Mrs. Spence matician at laboratory at Mass achusetts Institute of Technology where her hus in physics. band Mr. and Mrs. Rex Milligan the Radiation instructor is (Helen Ilkka) of the birth of Gene Gaylord, Michigan, announce David on October 31. George and Dorothy Garlock Ranney, of 1513 the birth of W. Barnes, Lansing, announce George Ellis II on November 26. Louise Shafer is research assistant the University of Minnesota where she toward at also taking work She may be reached at building, University Farm, St. Paul. textiles is a master's degree. the Home Economics in Agnes Teske Brothers hospital is a dietitian at in Poughkeepsie, New York. the Vassar Lt. Jean Barman at Charleston, S. C. is now in WAAC training 1939 Lt. Robert O. Bolster of Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, and Marion Webb were married September 22. Lloyd and Carolyn (Thompson, w'40) Campbell of 1014 W. Paterson, Flint, announce the birth of a son, William Lloyd, on March 20. Catharine Carlson and Anthony T. Schulte were married on June 2, and are at home in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, at 371 McKinley road. Bradley Gilbert is located igan, as plant superintendent of Cooperative creamery. in St. Louis, Mich the St. Louis Edith Green teaches English and home making in the high school at Mt. Clemens, Michigan. Robert S. Tooker and Berdene Bishop were mar ried on May 15 and are making their home in Saginaw where he is commercial pilot and flight instructor at Aircraft Sales and Service, Barry field. David and Jean Small James, of 280 Bedford avenue, Buffalo, New York, announce the birth of a son, David Earl, on April 26. Robert and Marjorie (Dinan, w'41) Bouck, of 1233 N. Court House road, Arlington, Virginia, announce the birth of a daughter, Judy Louise, Judy is the granddaughter of Ralph on April 6. E. Dinan, '15. Mr. Bouck is an agent with the U. S. Secret service in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Babcock, of 19428 Gable street, Detroit, announce the birth of Jon David on November 13. Jean Louise Cameron and Frederick P. Bag- in Martha- in Greenfield Village, Dearborn, perman were married August 15 Mary chapel where they live at 22362 W. Morley avenue. is purchasing agent Elmer P. Chaddock for in Lansing where (Vera Jane Minds) are Abrams Instrument company he and Mrs. Chaddock living at 601 W. Hillsdale. Sara Davis and history and literature of music at Olivet college, Olivet, Michigan. courses teaches 'cello in Avis Dorothy Gibson and Mordant E. Peck were married May 10 and are making their home at 4453 W. Pine boulevard, St. Louis, Missouri, where Dr. Peck in surgery at Barnes hospital. interns Jeannette Holcomb and Sgt. Burdette J. War- in St. Andrews July 12 son were married Episcopal church in Lawton, Oklahoma. Mrs. Warson has returned to Romeo, Michigan, where she teaches in the high school. Mr. and Mrs. Paul McCoy (Shirley Brant), of road, Pontiac, Michigan, announce 320 Roslyn the birth of Lynne Barrie on October 4. Merle McDonnell and Donald A. Burkhart- smeier were married November 26 and are living at 1715 North Gerard drive, Speedway City, Indiana. Stanley and Margaret Hand Mogelnicki and three-year-old son have moved to Midland, is sanitary engineer on the Dow Chemical their where Mr. Mogelnicki industrial waste disposal for company. June Olive Minogue, whose husband. Lt. Ray mond Minogue, has been reported a prisoner of the Japanese is room clerk the Philippines, at the Oroville Inn in Oroville, California. in Capt. Terry S. Ozier and Elizabeth Ann Henderson were married December 22 in Griffin, near their home Georgia. They Camp Grant, Illinois, where Capt. Ozier in in the veterinary section. structor are making is Capt. and Mrs. Kenneth Waite announce the birth of a son, Kenneth Alton Jr., on November living 5. They are in Colorado Springs where is commanding officer of Head Capt. Waite quarters II Air Support command. and Headquarters squadron, 1940 Alton Kurtz search foundation reached at 5481 S. Blackstone. is employed by the Armour Re in Chicago where he may be Lt. Norman R. Smith, now overseas with a quartermaster battalion, and Barbara DeFrancesco were married in Philadelphia on June 9. Barbara Sullivan and John M. LaRue were married August 1 and are making their home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at IV2 Centre street. Alfred Wooll and Gladys Brown were married June 28 and are living at 16650 Prairie avenue, Detroit, where he is metallurgist for the Aluminum Company of America. Lt. D. E. Hilliard, '36 Lt. Dorothea E. Hilliard, ten women '36, of Lansing, was in Michigan chosen among the first and the Women Army Auxiliary Corps for entered in Sep training at Des Moines, Iowa, tember. 1942. At the end of November she was is made a Third Officer, or Lieutenant and now living at Ormand Beach. Florida. She is an instructor in the Motor Corps at Daytona Beach for the WAAC's. Writing to her mother, Mrs. N. A. Hilliard, Lansing, recently, she said, "T am ready to go across any time I am called". Lt. Hilliard grad uated as an English major, and the schools at Clarenceville, Sault Ste. Marie and Pontiac before the WAAC's. She was the Chi Omega sorority and Phi a member of Kappa Phi, honorary scholastic group while in college. joining taught in "I'm too young to care much one way or the other, but you should see the smiles of my proud Dad and Mother!" reports Christian Gary, born May 14 to Christy and Charlotte Schmidt Blough. The corner card on the envelope read: Q.M.C. Laundry, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. Roberta Applegate has received her master's degree in journalism from Northwestern univer sity, and the Detroit Free Press. She lives in Detroit at 5475 Woodward avenue. is now club editor for Nancy Brown is teaching and managing the cafeteria at Grand Rapids Central High school. to last the crash of a U.A.L. plane from Chicago Dyle C. Cole, co-pilot with United Airlines two years, was killed November the for ferrying 18 in the army's Patterson freight the field at Dayton, Ohio. Mr. Cole enrolled training class sponsored by first civilian pilot in Pontiac. the college, took secondary and was selected for the co-pilot training course in Cali at fornia. This was followed by a course of in struction on multi-engined craft and he entered the service of United Airlines late in 1940. the Boeing School of Aeronautics training in Mr. and Mrs. Charles Boomer of 1921 E. 70th the birth of street, Cleveland, Ohio, announce Patsy Jean on October 14. (Texas A & M in Mineral Wells, Texas, where Jane Budella Freeman and Lt. Henry Forest '41) were married on Hauser July 4 they are making their home at 710 S. W. 4th avenue. Lt. Marvin L. Germain and Patricia Whitfield in were married November 11 and are Ozark, Alabama, at 137 Broad street. living A daughter, Jill Oliver, was born November 3 to Lt. and Mrs. Clarence J. Hamilton. Lt. Hamilton is serving overseas with the army and Mrs. Hamilton (the former Janice Oliver, w'421 is living Lt. Arvid F. Jouppi and Marjorie Mary Kline were married September 10 at the Marine Base in Quantico. Virginia. headquarters in Wallace, Idaho. Dr. W. G. and Elaine (Flott, of Mishawaka. a son on October 6. Indiana, announce '38) Magrane, the birth of Lt. William Mansfield and Ann Clark Doyle, w'43, were married October 24. They are mak ing their home at 1310 N. Third street, Monroe, Louisiana, where Lt. Mansfield to the A.A.F. Advanced Navigation school. is assigned Jean Richard and Robert Clore (Northwestern '37) were married April 26 and are living at 654 Cherry street, Winnetka, Illinois. Vincent and Phyllis Quick Sauve, of 631 Sher man, Saginaw, announce the birth of Ann Marie on December 2. Warren Tansey and Margaret Ann Kurtz, daughter of Raymond L. Kurtz, '09, were mar ried on June 1. They are making their home on Route 3 out of Elkhart, Indiana, and Mr. Tansey is employed at in South Bend. the Bendix Products division Francis Campau, apprentice seaman at the U. S. N. R. Midshipman's school in New York city, and Ann W. Buth, of Comstock Park, Michigan, were married October 31. Lt. Geoffrey S. Gough and Keith Riddlesbarger '42) were married November 14 (Northwestern and are at home near Camp Sutton, North Carolina, where he is with the 757th Tank bat talion. 1941 Jean Binkley and Corp LaVern Mayhew of the army air corps, were married J u ne 15, and are living in St. Louis, Missouri, at 3202 Lafayette. Lois Early is assistant manager of the cafeteria at the Elwood Ordnance plant in Elwood, Illinois. the lives public schools of Grand Ledge where she at 415 Harrison. teaches vocal music Jean Ann Golden in Dr. Norma Greiner may be reached at the Angell Memorial hospital in Boston. Howard C. Malpass and Dorothy M. Cummins, '42, were married September 5 and are living in Lansing at 815 Merrill street. F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 17 Braidwood, #40 Clinton Braidwood, 1940. class of recently achieved distinction. Employed as a chemist in the Reichhold Chemicals at Ferndale. Michigan. for developing Mr. Braidwood was Agripol. a synthetic rubber capable of replacing natural to which natural rubber was subject prior to Pearl Harbor. in 15 per cent of all uses responsible rubber The new product, containing no natural rub ber, has as its principal components soybean oil and ethyl alcohol. form, states the chemist, it is not suitable for tires or other friction. uses to heat and its present resistance requiring In Robert Wearanga and Katherine Covel, '40, were married August 15 and are living in Bala, Pennsylvania, at B 1. Hardie apartments. Mr. Wearanga is assistant in aircraft instrument de sign in the U. S. Naval Aircraft factory in Phil adelphia. Eldora Wohlert :s therapeutic dietitian at the General hospital in Saginaw, Michigan. training cadet Alvin Beard, officers ical warfare, has been stricken with and is on furlough. He may be reached S3 N. Clinton street. St. Johns. Michigan. in chem anemia through Patricia Carr and Capt. Carl J. Holcomb, formerly on the college staff, were married on June 28. Capt. Holcomb is serving overseas with the army and Mrs. Holcomb is living in Mayville, Michigan. the American Airlines Doris French is located in South Bend, Indiana, the Bendix is Eagle with airport. Her mailing address, however, Lake, Edwardsburg, Michigan. at Helene Harrow and Lt. (jg) H. Thomas Kep- pelman (Michigan) were married on November 7 and are making their home in Arlington, Vir ginia, at 1400 N. Kenilworth street. Apartment C. Gordon Lewis and Rosellen Dudgeon, w'43, were married on October 9 and are in Birmingham, Alabama, at 2537 Montevallo drive. living Newton Foster, '37 is an Chemist at the Westinghouse Research labor atories. Foster is shown above with the stove he and his associate devised to aid in the scientific search for better electric insulation materials. The iron bar, heated at one end and stove cooled at the other. Holes drilled into the bar at intervals are always an equal number of equal degrees apart Chemists cook temperature. insulation tougheners in test tubes in this stove to determine insula tion is weakened and made brittle. temperatures at which the in 18 . . . T HE R E C O RD Folks From Everywhere (Continued from Page 2) Under the direction of Lt. Col. Fur long 450,000 Michigan persons have been assigned to civilian defense duties, and some officials contend that Mich igan has perfected one of the best state wide defense organizations in the na tion. Before coming to Lansing last year in in obstetrics and Furlong was a well known doctor Pontiac, specializing gynecology. Hardware Specialist is one of Harry G. Smith the few to become engineering graduates ever a "hardware" specialist. Leaving East Lansing a f t er g r a d u a t i on in 1923, he spent seven years as an engineer with the Grand Rap ids Brass com in Grand pany Rapids, leaving there in 1936 to become assist- a nt g e n e r al manager of the Hoosier Lamp and Stamping company in Evansville, Indiana. Here he was advanced to vice- president and contracts manager. He became a specialist in the production of hardware items, aluminum products, as well as fabricated brass, steel and screw machine articles. H. G. Smith, '23 In January, 1943, Mr. Smith was named operations manager, of the Air craft Parts division, of Reynolds Metals company, in Louisville, Kentucky. He will superintend the opening and oper ation of five additional plant buildings which have the Reynolds company to augment the rap idly expanding aircraft parts business. In college Smith was a member of the leased by just been Delta Sigma Phi fraternity. New Onion the history of Thirteen years of selection and trial the new form part of Michigan State college Sweet Spanish onion, developed by Dr. Paul M. Harmer, muck specialist. Bulbs of the new onion, after weeks in storage, show less than one onion in a crate sprouting by spring. No seed the small is available, since supply has been sent out to California for increase, to be distributed in 1944 among members of the Michigan Onion Growers' association. OBITUARIES 1894 the first city in East Lansing Mr. Newell Lory F. Newell, operating engineer at the col lege for more than 25 years, died in a Lansing hospital on December 27. During his 45 years residence served as later as alderman, treasurer, and at the time of his death was justice of the peace. After the college Mr. Newell the was employed by the Ford Motor company, Reo Motor Car company, and other Lansing firms as mechanic and tool maker. leaving 1899 Charles leader a member of and J. DeLand, Republican former Secretary of State, died at his home in Detroit on January 10. Mr. Deland has recently been with the appeal board of the Civil Service in Lansing. He had previously been commission a deputy commissioner and legal counsel for the the National State Advisory commission under Recovery Administration, both houses of the State Legislature, an executive officer for the enforcement of the Motor Vehicle Retailing Code in Michigan, and a receiver for the Detroit Mortgage corporation. He was ad mitted to the bar in 1905 after serving as deputy- county treasurer in Jackson. From 1906 to 1910 he was chairman of the Republican County com mittee and a member of the constitutional con vention of 1907. He represented Jackson county to 1920 and in as Secretary subsequently in 1926. After his of State, ending his tenure that office. Mr. Deland moved retirement from the city to Detroit and in in 1929 represented the state house of representatives. In 1930 he was an unsuccessful primary candidate for gov ernor on from 1915 terms three senate served the Republican the state ticket. in the Toul engagements in a unit of the national guard 1923 Colonel Egbert M. Rosecrans. adjutant general of Michigan and state selective service director, died at his home in East Lansing on January 11. in He enlisted 1916 and served the following year on the Mex ican border. His unit went to France as the 119th the famous 32nd. or field artillery, a part of Red Arrow, division, where he participated in world war sector. Alsace-Lorraine, Aisne-Marne offensive, Meuse- and Oise-Aisne offensive. Argonne offensive, in May 1919 the army He was discharged from following and entered In fall. the the college the Michigan na November. 1920, he reentered lieutenant tional guard with the rank of second of then a the captain, he was detailed adjutant general as assistant to Colonel Bersey. in September, 1930. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in June 1940, and to colonel in September, 1940 when he succeeded Colonel Bersey as head of the state's military establish ment. He was a graduate of the infantry school at Fort Benning. Georgia, and the command and general staff school at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. In November. 1923, field artillery. the office of to major to Mrs. Clark Dies East Lansing and the college community was shocked December 26, to hear of the sudden death of Mrs. Arthur J. Clark, wife of Professor Clark, head of the department of chemistry. Death was due to heart trouble. She had been ill for several months. She had resided in East Lansing since September, 1907, and was affiliated with the East Lansing Peoples church, a co-founder and hon orary member of Xi Gamma Chapter of Chi Omega, and an honorary member of Mu Phi Epsilon. a national music honorary. The two '37. and Lt. Robert sons. Lt. Stewart Clark, in Ft. Bliss. Texas, and '30. are Clark. Camp Tyson, Tennessee. located In the Service (Continued from Back Cover) Ozier; Lt, Neil J. P a r k; Lt. Richard J. Pear- sail ; Lt. Stanley R. Pollyea; Lt. George L. Salsbury; Ensign Roy F. Seim; Ensign Warren Shapton ; Lt. Robert E. Smeltzer; Capt. William J. Smith; Lt. George B. Spero; Lt. H. C. Starke ; Major Dale Stephenson; Capt. Edward F. Tot- ton ; AS Raymond W. Turner; Roy Williams; Irving R. Lt. Richard Wriggelsworth; Lt. Wyeth; Capt. Robert W. Zant. 1940 Cadet Sam Anker; S/Sgt. Thomas Frederick Baker; Lt. Paul M. Bala ; Arthur L. Barber; Paul Barrett; Capt. John D. Beaver ; Pvt. Robert D. Belland; Bernard H. Bergin; Capt. Christian Beukema; Pvt. James Bernard Bird; Lt. Wayne H. Bowers; Capt. Ernest K. Bremer; Sgt. Del- bert R. Brundage; AS Francis Campau; Pvt. John J. Casavola; Ensign David C. Cowden; Ensign Charles F. Craig; Lt. George H. Cully; Capt. Walter J. Davies; Lt. Richard H. Davis; Lt. Daniel Fred Ellis; N. P. Foley; S/Sgt Clayton Forbes; Ensign William R. F r a n k; Lt, George R. Fraser (Navy) ; Lt. Marvin L. Ger main ; Lt. C. M. Gleason; Capt. A. Parker Gray Lt. F. C. Griswold; S/c Robert E. H a l l; Sgt. Charles E. Hamilton; Pvt. George Handler; Lt. Carl R. Hansen; Sgt. F. Gordon Harland; Cpl James Harland ; Capt. Charles D. Harris (Mar ines) ; A/C Paul S. Hensley ; Capt. John S. Her rick; Lt. James F. Hinckley; Lt. Claude J Hornbacher; Lt. Herbert R. Houghton ; Lt Wallace B. Hudson; Lt. Howard H. Irish; Lt Clare L. Jensen ; Sgt. George Keller; Lt. Leon ard R. Kyle; Cpl. James A. LaDu; Lt. William L. Lavens ; Lt. Arthur H. Leach; Lt. Francis E. LeClear; Lt. Frank M. Lievense; Lt. William B. Lutz ; Lt. Arthur W. McAllister; Lt. John W. McCrea ; Ensign Harold C. MacDonald; Lt. John T. Maghie'.se; Capt. Don C. Maliskey; Sgt. Donald B. Marshall ; Ensign Ross Martin; Cpl. Carmen Mercadante; Pvt. Carl Moeller; C.Sp. George C. Monroe; Pvt. Donald N. Morrison; Sp.l/c Raymond G. Mulchahey; Ensign R. W. Nahstoll ; Charles E. Nelson ; Ensign Louis (jg) Richard Nord ; Cpl. Garth Oswald; Lt. N. Reeves; Lt. Thomas Reeves; Lt. Jay H. Reid; Lt. Beryl Rendell; Ensign Robert R. Rioidan ; Lt. Don A. Rossi; Lt. Joseph Ruhe; AS Herbert Sayers ; Lt. Lucian Scamman; Lt. Harvey Seeley ; Capt. David Sherman ; Lt. Irving B. Sherman ; Lt. Francis Sibley ; Ensign Roy Skog; Pvt. Arthur Steeby; Lt. Oscar Sussman; Capt. W. F. Swartz; S2c Norman R. Thomp son ; Pvt. Donald S. Thrall ; Ensign John Torbet; Lt. Bruce Upton; Lt. Russell F. Walter; Cpl. Paul E. Wertsch; Cadet Charles R. Wilcox ; Lt. Lumon Willmeng; Cpl. Carlton Wodtke; Arthur R. Wolcott; Ensign Glenn Yingling; Lt. William Zabriskie; Capt. Robert H. Zimmerman. 1941 Lt. Edward Abdo; Lt. Robert E. Adams ; Lt. Thomas G. Arnold; Ensign Benjamin J. Azzar; Ensign Warren G. Ballachey ; Capt. Robert A. Barnum ; Cadet Alvin Beard; Lt. Maurice Bol ster; Capt. William Boyd; Lt. Pierson Brower; Lt. Thomas H. Brzoznowski; Lt. James R. Burgess; Pvt. William V. Burnett; Lt. Edgar C. Campbell; Ensign Edward J. Churchill; Sgt. Karl S. Clark J r. ; Sgt. Edward B. Cramton; A/C Norman Crocker; Lt. George Dedolph ; Milburn E. Disher Lt. George J. Dedolph; An thony J. Esper ; Lt. James H. F l y n n; Albert James Forte; Cpl. Richard C. F r y; Ensign W. Goody; Ph.M. 3/c Don F. Gould; Ensign Robert J. Grant; Lt. John Halligan; Lt. (jg) Daron Harden; Sp. 1/c Peter C. Harlow; Lt. Burl D. Harrison ; Ensign Jack Hislop; Pvt. Gordon Hogle; Ensign Reginald V. Holland; Lt. Samuel W. Horton ; Cpl. Loring Huston; Sgt. Stephen Jakubowski; Ensign Frank J. Karas ; Ensign John K. Keating; Sgt. Angus O. Kil- Send %i Named, o^ /Uumtu. in S&uuce Thank you for your splendid response to our request for names of alumni in service. Since the October issue of The Record, which carried the form appearing below, we have received hundreds of letters giving us pertinent information about M.S.C. men in the armed forces. If you haven't told us about your service address will you please fill out the form below and return it to the college. Miss Gladys Franks Alumni Recorder Michigan State College East Lansing, Michigan Name Class Year (Former students will designate years they would have graduated) Present Service Rank Branch of Service Unit.. Best Mailing Address. Informant Informant's Address J. Krause; AS born; Lt. Donald W. Kilbourn; A/C Edgar Kivela; Lt. William F. Konieczka; Ensign Stan ley Kowal; Lt. Floyd John E. Lalich; Am.M.3/c Fred M. List; Capt. Mul- ford Lockwood; Lt. Seymour Lustig; T/Sgt. George MacQueen; Lt. Harry Macy; Ensign Phillip D. Millsom ; Ph.M. 2/c Joel B. Montague; Lt. Tom Richard Nelson; Lt. Donal F. O'Brien; T/5 Robert Olson; Capt. Harry Robert P a g e; Ensign Hugh J. Patenge; Lt. (jg) Calvin E. Pederson; Lt. Alston G. Penfold; Lt. Robert R. P e r r y; Ensign Edmund Pogor; Ensign T. B. Pulkinen; Ensign Harold A. Ringelberg; Sgt. Anton Rizzardi; Ensign R. M. Roland; Sgt. John D. Rovick; Pvt. Robert E. Schmeling; Lt. Leslie Shapton ; Lt. John G. Shedd; Pvt. John E. Smith; Pvt. Robert E. Smith; Ensign Gor don Solberg; Lt. Robert D. Stauffer; Lt. Allan O. Stellingworth; Lt. Myron L. Strengberg; Sgt. Herman Struck; Lt. S. C. S u r r a t t; C.Sp. John B. Swan; Lt. Ray D. Taylor; AS Robert A. Tice; Pfc. Joseph S. Vandemark : Pvt. Burke Vanderhill; Cpl. William Vondrasek; Cpl. Ray mond H. Vorce; Lt. William S. W a r d; Pvt. William F. W a r n e r; Sgt. Earl G. Watson ; Capt. Robert J. Whitsit; Ensign George W. Williams; John M. Williamson ; Lt. Charles E. Wise; En sign Thomas H. Zerbe ; Lt. William H. Zylstra. 1942 John W. Coffman; Lt. Roy J. Alexander; Peter P. Basich; Pvt. Leonard H. Bazuin; Lt. George L. Beard; Mid. Thomas B. Beard; Mid. Richard L. Beem; Lt. Philip L. Bek; Lt. Robert T. Bogan; Lt. Charles A. Brandel; Pvt. Pvt. Charles G. Collins; RT2/c Donald E. Cooke ; Pvt. Angus B. Cory; Lt. Gerald L. Crane; Lt. Leonard R. Crane; Lt. Richard A. Cross; Cpl. Franklin C. Daiber; Ensign Marshall Dann ; Pvt. William E. Derbyshire; Ensign W. H. Dewey; Pvt. Bruce W. Drynan; Ensign C. B. Eckel; AS Richard L. Eckhart; Lt. Wallace Ernsberger; A/C Harold Estes; Lt. Fay C. Ewbank; Lt. Loren C. Ferley; Lt. Robert R. Finch; Lt. Bernard Fontana; Lt. Robert Ford; Lt. Wil fred A. Friedman ; A/C Joe Gerard; Sgt. Roland A. Gessert; Pvt. Gerhard F. Gettel; Lt. Harry J. Gilliver; Kenneth Greene; Lt. Thomas N. Greene (Marines) ; Pvt. James S. Guy; Frances Jean H a r d y; Pvt. Lacy I. Harmon; Pvt. Victor G. Horvath ; RT3/c Joseph Moses Jackson ; Cadet John- Huntley A. Johnson; Pvt. Maynard B. Date Filled Out- ston; Ensign John C. Kane; Lt. Gilbert N. Ketcham; Sgt. John G. Ketzle; Ph.M.3/c Arthur L. Kieras; Lt. Jack Koernke; Lt. Edward Kozicki; Ensign Paul A. Krentel; Lt. Wilford E. Kunst; Lt. Arthur W. Land; Ensign E. W. Leyrer; A/C Doyle W. Lott; Pvt. Jacob M. Lusch ; Lt. John J. McGuinness ; Lt. (jg) Douglas MacDonald ; Capt. Frederick D. Manz; Pvt. William L. Melvin ; Lt. Leland G. Merrill; Anne Miller; Lt. Louis A. Mitzelfeld ; Ensign John T. Moore; C.Sp. Robert Morris; Lt. William L. Morris ; William Morrison ; Mid. Peter J. Muller ; Lt. Laurance Nelson; Lt. Ronald J. Nugent; Pvt. Carl O. Olson; Clayton Reister; Sgt. John F. Reynolds; Mid. Victor P. Saper; Pvt. Wil liam R. Schemenauer; Doris Sharpe; Lt. Roger Smith; Sgt. Wendell A. Smith; Pvt. Robert G. Stevenson; Ph.M. 1/c James C. Stewart; Ensign Howard M. Stiver ; Lt. Roy G. Struble; J e tt O. Sunderland; Lt. Robert A. Telder; Pvt. Thomas V. Waber; AS K. G. Weaver; Ensign Tom Wilson. 1943 J. Hildinger; Lt. John P. Downey; Lt. Carl R. Edmonds ; A/C Howard W. Fleming; Lt. Clarence Fowler; Lt. Joseph G. Glaser; Lt. David K. Hagens; Lt. Lawrence John Maynard Hill ; Ensign Thomas E. Jansen ; Pvt. Robert R. Linck; Mid. Jerry MacDougall; Yeo.3/c Margaret Grace Marchant; Arnold W. Matthews; Lt. Jay R. Phelps; H.A.l/c David Schlott; Ph.M. 2/c Myron F. Schlott; Pvt. Oliver H. Shaw; Lt. Joseph Sinclair; Ensign Charles G. Smith; Pvt. Vern H. Strait. 1944 Pvt. Eber Allen; S2/c Gregg Benner; John J. Bordeaux; Pvt. George W. Kott; H A l /c Walter C. Mack; Nicholas Picciuto; S2/c Hallett E. P e t t i t; A/C Frank H. Prescott J r. ; Pvt. Lewis E. Read; Mid. Edward O. Skidmore; Cpl. Richard O. Trapp. 1945 Lt. Robert C. Beach; A/C Willis P. Beard; Pvt. Douglas E. Berlin; Pvt. Richard W. Clark; Pfc James Gabriel ; Martin E. Goetz ; Pvt. James W. Keogh ; Pvt. Vance Mclntyre; A/C Carroll Nowitzke; Pvt. James W. Ochs; A/C Nathan Patlpnu ; Pvt. David Ramsey; Reed G. Shanks. F E B R U A R Y, 1 9 43 . . . 19 In the Service of D. S. A. represent in the October Editor's note: The following M. S. C. alumni in service are additions and corrections to the issue and DOES list published NOT list of Michigan in service. If names are missing State alumni in the combined columns of issues, please use the form on page 19 to bring our records up to date. complete these two a 1913 Lt. Col. Eugene C. Spraker. 1914 Brig. Gen. Ernest H. Burt. 1915 Col. George L. Caldwell; Capt. August M. Engel; Major DeOrmond McLaughry (Marines) ; Col. Russell P o t t s; Brig. Gen. Donald A. Stroh. 1916 Col. Walter T. Gorton; Lt. E. G. Hamlin. 1917 Lt. Comdr. Charles E. Hebard; Major John A. McDonald; Col. Paul J. Vevia. 1918 Capt. Ralph H. Major; Major Lee H. Tucker. 1920 Capt. L. V. Benjamin; Lt. Col. Harold N. Mills. 1921 Capt. Stanley J. Marsden; Capt. Walter K. Willman. 1923 Lt. Col. Jay Dykhouse; Capt. Russell Him- Ivan melberger; Lt. Col. E. D. Mallison; Major Sippy. 1924 Sgt. Harold C. Newman; Hugo Sundling. 1930 Lt. Col. John E. Baird; Major Kenneth T. Boughner; Lt. Hugh C. Campbell; Lt. Henry W. Clapp ; Lt. Ralph L. Clark (Navy) ; Lt. Lewis H. Hackney; Capt. Harland R. Kline; Lt. James M. Merritt; Pfc. Charles V. Pevic; Lt. Jane I. P i a t t; Major Paul H. Troth; Lt. Donna Werback; Lt. Sarah A. Wheeler; Capt. Addison F. Wilber; Lt. Sarah Wheeler; Major Lewis J. Workman. 1931 Lt. Howard J. Berkel ; Lt. Robert J. Biggar (Navy) ; Capt. James H. Campbell ; Capt. Douglas C. Carruthers; Capt. Howard J. Collins; Lt. Lewis B. Haigh; Capt. Amos J. Hawkins; Major Edward Holtzkemper ; Capt. William B. Kershaw ; Lt. Stephen Kozelko; Ensign Alfred L. Little; Capt. James M. Malone; Capt. Milford E. Mar tin ; Capt. William J. Meyer; Capt. LeRoy H. Sample; S/Sgt. Robert O. Sowash; Capt. Thomas Woodworth. 1932 Capt. Forest W. Acton; Pvt. Dwight W. Brown; Lt. B. R. Gibbon ; Col. William Hatcher; Major Harris O. Machus : Capt. William A. Maples; Lt. Dee W. Pinneo; Capt. Harold J. Tyndall; Ph.M. 2c Howard L. Woolfan; Capt. Paul Younger. 1933 Lt. M. C. Abraham : Major Felix Anderson ; Pvt. H. Rex Aurand; Capt. Marvin N. Binder; Cpl. George N. Brown ; Capt. Ralph H. Brunette; Capt. Edward T. C a r r; Lt. Robert A. Clark: Capt. Robert S. DeGurse; Lt. Raymond F. Dur- fee; Capt. Leslie C. Fenske; Capt. Donald A. Fisk; Major Richard G. Holland; Capt. A. N. Hoover; Capt. Clarence Hoxsie; Ensign Don A. Jones ; Capt. Ray D. Lamphear : Capt. Morris McMichael; Capt. Fred P. Magers; Lt. Charles R. Marriott; Capt. K. J. Moilanen; Major A. E. Rackes; Lt. Ray E. Ruotsala : Lt. John T. Sinclair; Capt. Earl E. Thayer; Major George Thomas; Sgt. Alfred Trout; Lt. Walter G. Walker ; F2C James Weinland ; Hugh E. Wriggel- sworth. 1925 1934 Major Donald M. Jacques; Pvt. J. Martin Stites. 1926 Lt. Willard W. Carpenter; Major Ralph Mor- rish. 1927 Pvt. John S. Armstrong; Capt. Charles R. Doyle. 1928 Lt. (jg) Koester L. Christensen ; Major Robert F. Collins; Lt. Fred C. Garlock; Lt. Col. I. H. Gronseth ; Major William E. Hoy; Major Russell Lord ; Dayton McKillop ; Major Gerald Peterson ; Yeoman Walter Schad; Lt. Col. Robert B. Southworth; C.Sp. Earl VanBuren; Lt. Fred M. Wargowsky. 929 Edward F. Bredlow ; Major Stanley Den- Herder ; Major Stanley H u n t; Major Melvin D. Losey; Lt. Wilfred D. McCully; Lt. Col. Austin W. Merchant; Capt. A. E. Nussdorfer; Lt. Col. Ralph H. Pryor ; Lt. J. Kenneth Schepers ; Major J. P. Thompson; Lt. Phyllis T r a u t m a n n; Lt. Stanley E. Weed. Capt. John Aldinger; Sgt. Albin Chrono; Lt. James H. Dekker; Capt. Carl deZeeuw; Cpl. Alvin E. Jenks ; Lt. Emil J u n t u n e n; Capt. Dale Shearer; Lt. Frederick C. Shotwell; Pvt. Robert T. Terlaak ; Capt. A. A. Towner; Major Robert P. Wilson. 1935 Capt. Robert E. Armstrong; Lt. Howard Biss- land; Capt. Ferris A. Church; Capt. Dorian H. Dickman; Lt. Harold W. Dunn; Lt. Samuel E. Eisenberg; Betty Elzinga. WAAC; Capt. T. F. E t t e r; C. Sp. Robert A. Gardner; Lt. Winfield Hinman ; Capt. Harry Hornberger; Lt. Nelson S. Howe J r .; Capt. Robert F. Killeen ; Capt. Allan J. Kronbach; Lt. P a rr C. LaMonte; Lt. B. R. Lindquist; Capt. Donald MacDonald ; Allan H. Mick; Ensign Gary S. Morgan; Capt. Fred Phillippo; Donald J. Sexton : Lt. Wesley F. Snyder; Capt. Seth J. Spitler; Major Norman Stoner : Capt. Douglas Symes ; S/Sgt. Masil Wyer. 1936 Lt. Frederic R. Ainslie: Capt. David C. Baird; Pvt. Norman Benow: Cpl. John C. Berg; Lt. Theodore Chappell; Capt. Ross E. Clark; Lt. Norman Claus; Capt. Charles DeLand; Capt. John B. Engelbreit; Pvt. Bruce Fox ; Lt. Thomas E. Hamilton ; Lt. Dorothea Hilliard ; Pvt. Wilfred J. Hosley; Capt. Martin L. Krauss; Lt. Karl S. Lindeman; Major John H. McMillan; Capt. James G. Moore; Major Robert E. Nelson ; En sign Thomas O'Brien ; Lt. (jg) Arthur D. Peters ; Capt. William G. R. P i t t; Lt. Reginald Reynolds; Lt. Donald F. Rundle; Lt. Earl S t u m p; Pvt. Curtis W. White; Donald E. Wettlaufer; Cpl. Richard Williams ; Ensign Mary Jane Withrow; Lt. (jg) Louis F. Zarza. 1937 Lt. D. P. Appling J. Dimmick; Lt. Lawrence (Navy) ; Capt. Charles M. Ashley; Lt. Maurice C. Bevier; Lt. James L. Boydston; Lt. Stewart Clark; Lt. John A. Day ; J. Lt. Kenneth Distel ; Major George Dow; Capt. Edmund B. E a m a n; Capt. Norman F e r t i g; C. Sp. Gary H. Fisher; Cpl. Warren Fleischauer; Lt. George Frederickson ; Capt. Milton M. George; Capt. J. Henshaw; Philip Getzinger; Capt. Milo (Marines) ; Lt. Major Frederick M. Huntley; Major Rex Lamerson; Ensign Ralph L. Olmstead; Ensign Louis J. Osterhous; Lt. Thomas P e r r y; Ardis M. Price; Capt. Robert J. Rosa: Lt. Robert L. Rowe; En John G. Schafer; Lt. Steve Sebo; Pvt. sign John O. Tower; Lt. Harvey Sibrack; Capt. Donald G. T r a p p; Lt. John VanWoerkom ; Capt. Robert E. Weber; Lt. Harold J. Whitman; Sgt. James W. Williams ; Lt. Alvin R. Wingerter; Capt. Howard Zindel. James Donald Hittle 1938 Lt. Jean Barman; Ensign Robert J. Barthold ; Cpl. Clyde A. Bartlett; Pvt. Andrew Bednar; Cadet George Bird; Lt. Allan R. Black ; R. D. Bond; Lt. Glenn Breitenwischer; Capt. John Brower; Lt. Col. Robert Burhans ; Lt. Robert Carpenter; Major John B. Collings ; Lt. Eliza beth Crane; Ensign Harmon G. Cropsey; Lt Donald A. Dake ; Lt. Roger E. DeVries; Lt, (jg) Quentin E. Ewert; Lt. John G. Fitch; En sign Edward J. Flowers; Capt. Frank Gaines Lt. James A. Gibbs ; Mid. Martha K. Greene ; Pvt Gordon J. H a t c h; Pfc. Ralph V. Jennings; Lt Edgar H. Jones ; Capt. John M. Keyes : Major Ken neth E. Lay ; Capt. Mark Lightfoot; Capt. Gordon Lippert; Capt. Francis A. Lord; Ensign Thomas W. McCarty ; Lt. Walter E. McLellan ; Ensign Donald C. McSorley; Lt. Tom Matlack; Pvt. Tom Mercy ; Capt. Ralph G. Orcutt; Cpl. Floyd H. Ogden; Capt. G. W. Packowski : Lt. James E. Pierson; Lt. Robert W. Reed; Capt. Roland W. Robinson; A/G Lewis Ruesink; Ensign David Shotwell; Ensign Malcolm Simons; En sign Edwin E. Stein ; Lt. Ralph H. Sullivan ; SC2/c Robert S. Ward; Ensign Martin War- skow; Capt. Warren K. Watson : Lt. Harry Weinburgh; Capt. Alan Winter; Lt. Roger E. Woodcock; Lt. Donald A. Wright. 1939 Lt. Dale L. Arnold; Grant Baker; Lt. (jg) William A. Beck; Lt. Dale D. Beery ; Capt. George Branch; Lt. Carl K. Brown ; Lt. Fred erick L. Burge; Lt. John P. Campana ; Capt. William Carpenter; Lt. Dean W. Carter; Capt. Eugene S. Ciolek; A/C George S. Collins; Sgt. Eugene D. Cummins ; Lt. Richard A. Dail ; Capt. Darwin Dudley ; Sgt. Max Emmons; Capt. Emil Eschenburg; Lt. G. W. Fitzgerald; Ensign Robert H a g m a n; Pvt. Allen D. Hall; Lt. F. J. Hammerstein ; Lt. F. J. Hartnacke; Pfc. Kenneth Hull; A/C Arthur F. Hultin; Ensign Clifford R. Humphrys ; Irving Israel; Lt. Charles R. Kaufman ; Ensign William M. Kimball: Sgt. Richard J. Lindl; Cpl. C. Jack Little; Aer.M.3/c Dorsey J. Morris; Lt. O. J. Munson ; Lt. Keith A. Murdoch; Lt. Carl W. Nelson ; Pvt. Percy Nugent; Pvt. William B. Otto; Capt. Terry S. (Turn to inside back cover)