S P A R T AN A L U M NI M A G A Z I NE CM u • -. .r J A N U A RY 15, 1952 MSCS ALL-TIME ALL-AMERICANS M I C H I G AN STATE COLLEGE Michigan State Launches Evening College Program A full-fledged evening college program was launched this month by Michigan State College. Approximately 50 courses are being offered for credit during the first quar ter of operation. Based on surveys con ducted in the Lansing area, the schedule of courses will be expanded to meet new or changing demands of people in the Central Michigan area. Expansion of Previous Efforts The new program is known officially as the Michigan State Evening College. It is an expansion of previous efforts by the college to meet demands from adults for credit courses in the local community. Courses will range all the way from social sciences to engineering and busi ness management. Both undergraduate and graduate courses will be offered enabling Lansing to work toward bachelor or advanced degrees. residents Continuing Education Service Sponsors Edgar L. Harden, director of the spon soring Continuing Education Service, said that "the college's purpose is to extend to people in the greater Lansing area who would like to earn degrees or to improve their quali fications for advancement." its services Course offerings are available in the following areas: accounting, economics, business, social science, education, mathe matics, chemistry, horticulture, English, living, his biological science, effective tory, arts, and fine literature and mechanical, electrical, civil and sanitary engineering. Albert H. Zenner Dies Albert H. Zenner, retired Detroit manufacturer and long-time friend of educational institutions, including Michi gan State College, died Nov. 21. He was 83 years old. interest took an active Zenner, although not an alumnus of MSC, in the school. He was an ardent booster for agricultural developments at MSC when it was the Michigan Agricultural Col lege, and also helped to raise funds for various college projects. CHAPEL NEARS COMPLETION: The Alumni Memorial Chapel, dedicated to MSC's 500 war dead, is nearing completion. The exterior is expected to be completed next month, and the entire chapel should be in operation by March, officials said. L'pon completion, the chapel will be used as a meditation place for students as well as for other religious activities of students, faculty and alumni of Michigan State College. More Funds Needed Memorial Chapel Nears for Interior As Completion Construction of Michigan State Col lege's Alumni Memorial Chapel is near ing completion, but $25,000 is still needed to complete the interior decor, according to Claud R. Erickson, '22, chairman of the building committee of the Alumni Advisory Council. The exterior of the building is slated for completion in February, Erickson said, and if funds are forthcoming, the entire chapel should be in operation by March. Dedicated to Alumni Dead The memorial chapel is dedicated to the 500 Spartan alumni who made the supreme sacrifice in all U. S. wars. The names of the honored alumni will be chiseled in stone in the chapel's narthex. Plans call for the chapel to be used for religious affairs on campus and as a place of worship for students, Erickson said. The building committee is still solicit ing for additional funds to make up the $25,000 deficit. Total cost of the chapel is estimated at about $200,000. The $175,000 in funds already spent were entirely by alumni and contributed friends of the college. Windows to Depict Stories Highlight of the chapel, located on the north side of Red Cedar river, just across from Shaw Hall dormitory, will be the stories depicted in the stained glass win dows. Included among the depicted stories are the history of civilization, the his tory of MSC, President John A. Hannah's aims of education, and faith, hope and charity. New Landmark There is a new landmark at Michigan State—a towering 250-foot smokestack for the main college power plant. It has taken over the function of the old and shorter stack at the old power plant, a direction-finder for students and faculty for 31 years. The old stack will continue to stand, at least for the present. Vol. 57—No. 1 R E C O RD T HE A L V IE L. S M I T H, Editor JOHN C. LEONARD, '48, and RICHARD J. DANDENEAU, Associate Editors STAEB H. KEESLER, '41, Director of Alumni Relations; GLADYS FRANKS, '27, Recorder; FEED W. STABLEY, Sports Editor; EDWARD M. ERICKSON, '48, Assistant Sports Editor; JOHN MCGOFF, '50, Assistant Director of Alumni Relations; MADISON KTJHN and JOSEPH G. DUNCAN, Historians; JOHN W. FITZGERALD, '47, Agricultural Editor; MRS. BARBARA CAHOON, Artist; W. LOWELL TBEASTER, Director of Information Services. Campus photos this issue by EVERETT HUBY, RAY HUBY, BOB BROWN, and JOHN RANDALL, '52. Member of the American Alumni Council, THE RECORD is published seven times a year by THE DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION SERVICES. Michigan State College. Entered as second class matter at East Lansing, Michigan, under the Act of Congress, August 24, 1912. January 15, 1952 «» •• i -1 Outstanding Consulting Engineer Comes to MSC A new Department of Engineering Mechanics has been created in the School of Engineering with Dr. Charles 0. Har ris, head of civil engineering, named as director, and a prominent New England onsulting engineer has been named to take Dr. Harris' place. Features Applied Mechanics Research The new department will institute the teaching of mechanics to all engineering students and possibly from other schools of the college, Dr. Harris said. Though many of the new depart ment's duties are not determined as yet, theoretical and experimental research in the field of applied mechanics will be a major function, he added. students As new head of the Department of Civil and Sanitary engineering Michigan State selected Dr. John R. Snell, presi dent-owner of Engineering Services, Inc., of Massachusetts, a consulting civil en gineering firm. He also has served as a lecturer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. Has D.S. Degree from Harvard Dr. Snell was born in Soochow, China, in 1912, and received his B.E. degree in civil and sanitary engineering from Van- derbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; his M.S. degree the University of Illinois, Urbana; and his D.S. degree from Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. from Dr. Snell's firm worked in the fields of in the sanitary and civil engineering New England area. If You Want to Move Ahead, Better Learn to Read Faster Most people can't read well, and that fact is particularly troublesome for col lege students, teachers and business executives. Prof. Byron VanRoekel, Michigan State College reading improvement di rector, has the job of doing something about it. Prof. VanRoekel some people could learn to read a whole book in two hours—1,500 words a minute. said find their College students studies suffer because of inability to read well and fast. Business executives, buried under a deluge of reports, letters and publications, are faced with the same problem of trying to wade through the materials and getting something out of them. NEW ALUMNI LEADERS: The 1951-52 Alumni Advisory Council elected officers and new members at its annual meeting Homecoming weekend. Stand ing, left to right, are Ray Turner, '09; Fred Arnold, '39; Wilbur L. Hart, '49; Ross Shoecraft, '38; Leonard L. White, '42; Walter Kirkpatrick, '33; Kenneth Priestley, '34; and Starr H. Keesler, '41, MSC director of alumni relations. Seated, left to right, are Harold Gasser, '25, incoming chairman; Lee O. Ben- ner, '12, retiring chairman; Sheldon Lee, '17, vice-chairman; and Al Cox, '33, secretary. M SC Gets Kellogg Gull Lake Estate; To Be Center for Educational Work Michigan State College has been given the $1,000,000 country estate of W. K. Kellogg, Battle Creek, who died Oct. 6. The estate is located on Gull Lake, 12 miles northwest of Battle Creek. Deed to the 50-acre site was given to the college in November by Dr. Emory W. Morris, president of the Kellogg Foundation. Addition of the Gull Lake estate to the list of Kellogg gifts to the college followed by nine weeks the opening of Kellogg Center for Continuing Educa tion. The Kellogg Foundation contri buted $1,400,000 toward the construction of Kellogg Center. To Use for Extension Programs MSC President John A. Hannah said the Gull Lake property would be used as a biological station and for various ac tivities of the Cooperative Extension Service. Later it may become the lower peninsula center for the college's off- campus summer school work, he added. The estate has 2,300 feet of frontage on Gull lake. Major building on the site is a large three-story manor house, which will be re-designed to provide housing and meal accommodations for 60 to 80 students, President Hannah said. Valuable in Future MSC Plans "The college is very happy to receive this property from the Kellogg Founda tion," President Hannah said. "It works well into our long-time planning to oper ate the bird sanctuary, the farm station and the forestry tract as one unit." During World War II the estate was used for a while as a U. S. Coast Guard training station. Later it was deeded by Mr. Kellogg to the U. S. Army to be used as a convalescent home for patients from Percy Jones hospital, Battle Creek. The last army patients were moved out of the home more than a year ago, and to the title to the property Kellogg Foundation. returned In accepting the estate for MSC, the State Board of Agriculture pledged to use the property for educational pur poses for at least 50 years. Grants to Four Scholars Four MSC scholars have been given a the total of $1,978 in grants from Rockefeller Foundation, New York City, for studies in Midwestern life and his tory. They are Dr. Bernard I. Duffey, De partment of English; Drs. W. H. Form and J. A. Beegle, Department of Soci ology; and Charles Hampton, Depart ment of Written and Spoken English. 356379 J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 . 3 The reading improvement clinic has already helped students with their read ing problems, and now the college is expanding its services to non-students. The college will take immediate pos session of the property, and officials hope that reconditioning will be completed by next summer. AFFAIRS OF STATE l:f!l|It Student Affairs With memories of Christmas cheer and mistletoe behind some 13,000 Spartan students returned to campus to buckle down with the winter quarter "battle of the books." them, They could look back on a fall term which saw their football team rack up its first undefeated season since 1913. They had rubbed elbows with some of America's best-known personalities — Edward Weeks, editor of the Atlantic Monthly, the New York City Opera Com pany, Patrice Munsel of the Met, and Sen. Blair Moody, who appeared on Sigma Delta Chi's "Meet Your Senator" panel in November. They looked forward to meeting more celebraties—Myra Hess, famed British the Philadelphia Orchestra, pianist, Jascha Heifetz, the Norwegian Boys' Choir and Ogden Nash, poet-humorist, all to appear on MSC's lecture-concert series. Looking back into fall quarter, stu dents could boast a in blood donations—521 pints—the national col legiate record for the Red Cross' Novem ber blood drive. record December saw the appointment of new publications editors. Dan McCrary, Hickory Corners junior, became editor of the Michigan State College News for the winter term, while Dick Lang, Grand Rapids senior, was reappointed business manager. New cadet colonels of the college's Air Force and Army ROTC units are Richard Meyer, East Lansing junior, Army; and K. E. Griffith, Howell senior, Air Force. On a lighter vein, two honorary coed colonels and eight lieutenant colonels were named to reign over the military Coronation Ball held Nov. 30, by various branches of the armed services repre sented on campus. The honorary colonels were Mary Jane Allen, Mancelona fresh man, Air Force, and Lois Fisher, Han cock senior, Army. Crying over some spilt milk is Lieuten ant Detective C. J. Becker of the campus police. Becker says that all 16 milk dispensers in Shaw Hall were tampered with by residents last November in attempts to get their milk without paying for it. Two were arrested. Campus police picked 4 . . .. T HE R E C O RD LEARNING WITH FATHER: left, Bob Schwei, Iron Mountain, gets a few tips on homework from his father, "Jack," '23, back at MSC for a master's degree. Both will receive degrees in June. them up after a complaint was sounded by the company owning the dispensing machines. Being a misdemeaner, the "culprits" could be sentenced to 60 days in jail or fined $150 apiece. It remained to be seen whether they would go before the judge or Dean of Students Tom King their punishment. Some students for the they should be taken before felt source itself—Bossy! Degrees Go to 543 Degrees were conferred on 543 stu dents at MSC's first fall term Commence ment in history Nov. 29. Bachelor's degrees were given to 225 students, mas ter's to 138 and doctorate degrees to 21. Dr. William W. Whitehouse, president of Albion College, gave the Commence ment address, "Courage for Our Day." "You know how challenging the world is. On every hand we talk about crises, but it is how we face crises that is signi ficant," he said. "In all of us there are potentialities. Life's outcome depends on what we do with our potentialities." "When you see the world's capacity for suicide, you should also l«ok at its livability," he said, and capacity for concluded the place of the individual in creative and dedicative living." that "nothing can take Like Father, Like Son The old adage "like father, like son" is running true to form again at Michi gan State where Jack and Bob Schwie of Niagara, Wis., are attending college to gether. Jack, the elder of the pair, is working on his master's degree in education while his son, Bob, is majoring in business ad ministration. Both will receive their de grees from MSC in June. This is Jack's second trip to Michigan State. He graduated the first time in 1922. In fact, most of Jack's professors are old pals, making his return seem like "old home week." The elder Schwie was a football star at MSC, where he won three letters in 1918, 1919 and 1920. He played in the backfield against famous George the Gipp and company of Notre Dame. He also was a member of the Spartan track team. He has since taught school in Kings- ford and Iron Mountain and was prin cipal of Niagara high school for six years before returning to college. Both men are enjoying their stay at Michigan State. But at home in Niagara, mother says, "It's kind of lonesome with out the men around." Taxes for Students, Too Taxation to support governmental ac tivities may invade a new field soon if a Spartan student government proposal to levy a 25-cent tax on all students is okayed by the student body. The State Board of Agriculture, gov erning body of the college, has approved a proposed amendment to the student government empowering constitution Student Congress to levy and collect the tax. Gaylord Sheets, Lansing senior, presi dent of the Student Congress, said, "Ade quate financing is the only way we will ever realize the full scope of our new constitution. Let's face it; money is the power behind any paper power." The student body will vote on the amendment during either the winter or spring term. The tax, if approved, will be collected at registration and deposited with the college. A majority of the stu dent body will have to vote, with a majority of those voting approving the Long Haul for an "A" A Spartan student and four pals tra veled 1,759 miles, interviewed a pretty Wellesley College coed, and returned with souveniers—all in 57 hours and all for a class assignment in a radio-speech course. C. G. "Jerry" Burke, Jr., Birmingham junior, started the whole thing when he was given an assignment to get "a tape- recording of an interview with a per sonality in the news." Kiddingly, he suggested to his friends that he was going to interview Mary Lloyd-Rees, Wellesley College freshman featured in Life magazine as the "typical American coed." The four buddies took him up on it, and within a few hours the quintet was headed east with Spartan pennants, an MSC toy dog, a green and white blanket and—a tape recorder. Twenty-two hours later the MSC dele gation appeared at Eliot hall, one of the Massachusetts college's women's dormi tories, to the astonishment of the coeds. After a four-hour stay, including din ner, the all-important tape-recorded in terview and exchange of momentos, the crew left to return to East Lansing. The astonishment of the Wellesley coeds was mild compared to the reaction Burke got when he played his tape to the class and its instructor, James D. Davis, assistant professor of speech. Needless to say, Burke got an "A." Lake Pollution Results A new method of eliminating lake and stream pollution at lower cost than pres ent methods, has been developed by the Michigan State College Engineering Ex periment Station. Perfected under the direction of Dr. Clyde C. DeWitt, director of the Engi neering Experiment Station at MSC, the new method will remove waste and sew age from water at about one-third the cost of present methods. Employing a process similar to that used in making carbonated beverages, Dr. DeWitt said the method can best be described as follows: Patton, Hawkins Die Patton Hawkins One of Michigan State's rising young parasitologists and the former head of the voice department died within four days of each other last October. They are Dr. Philip A. Hawkins, pro fessor of parasitology, who died Oct. 30 of polio while doing research work in India, and Fred Patton, former head of the voice department and one-time Metro politan Opera singer, who died Oct. 26 of pneumonia at his home in Detroit. Dr. Hawkins, 36-year-old scientist, has been on the Michigan State staff since 1939. He earned his A.B. and M.A. de grees from the University of California, Berkeley, and his D.V.M. and Ph.D. degrees from MSC in 1944 and 1950. Widely-known in the field of parasi tology, he had written two books and two laboratory manuals. At the time of his death, he was studying in India on a Fulbright scholarship. Fred Patton, 63, was head of MSC's Department of Voice from 1932 to 1946, and during that time was dean of the Bay View Summer School of Music. A Wagnarian baritone, Mr. Patton sang with the Metropolitan from 1927 to 1929. During his long residence in Lansing, he was affiliated with practically every The sewage removal operation traps air in the water under pressure. The same thing happens when a previously- opened bottle of carbonated drink is shaken up with a stopper over the top. When the pressure on the waste water is the is, stopper is taken off the carbonated drink bottle—the bubbles foam top, carrying waste materials with them. The water remaining at the bottom is per fectly clear. released—that like when the to At the present time, Dr. DeWitt said, many industries are not able to do a good job of removing waste from the water they use because many waste pro ducts such as oils, very fine metals and fibers will not settle quickly out of the waste water. "Many cities which are faced with the problem and need to expand their sew age disposal systems may prefer this new method. It will prove easier on tax payers than the old methods because less equipment and space are needed." . . On The Cover . Is Michigan State's all-time All- team, dating from 1935 American through 1951. (See story on page 13.) Sharing the center slot are Tackle Don Coleman, left, and End Bob Carey, who received more major first place votes on 1951 All-Ameri- can teams than any other Spartan greats. Reading clockwise around the cover are other MSC Ail-Ameri cans, with the year of their selection listed: Al Dorow, 1951; Sid Wagner, 1935; Don Mason, 1949; John Pingel, 1938; Lynn Chandnois, 1949; Everett Grandelius, 1950; Dome Dibble, 1950; James Ellis, 1951; and Ed Bag- don, 1949. The series of scenes depicting the beautiful Spartan campus will be continued with the March issue. in music organization the community. In Lansing and East Lansing are many singers he either started on the road to success, or coached en route. At the time of his death, Mr. Patton was conducting a studio in Detroit. He reached his success over a long and rug ged path, having left home at the age of 14 with no formal education. Faculty Affairs A. G. Kettunen, state 4-H Club leader at Michigan State College, has been re elected chairman of the board of trustees of the National 4-H Foundation. The Foundation receives and manages gifts the International Foreign for financing Youth Exchange program. Dr. Carson C. Hamilton, professor of English at MSC, has been elected first president of the newly-organized Michi gan College English Association. The association is affiliated with the national College English Association. Reelected executive-secretary of the Michigan Counselors Association is Dr. Raymond N. Hatch, acting director of MSC's Institute of Counseling, Testing and Guidance. this capacity, Dr. Hatch also edits the association's news letter, "The Michigan Counselor." In "Writing Without Rules" is the title of a new book published recently by Robert L. Wright, director of writing in MSC's Basic College. improvement A second book titled "Voice and Dic tion Drillbook for Speech Students," has been published this fall by Lucia C. Morgan, assistant professor of speech, dramatics and radio education at MSC. "Twentieth Century Painting: 1900- 1950," is the title of a book published by Dr. Hugo Munsterberg of MSC's De partment of Literature and Fine Arts. The volume presents an exposition of the principal artists and artistic tendencies in the painting of the modern era. Dr. Paul L. Dressel, director of coun seling and chairman of the Board of Examiners at MSC, is one ef the con tributors to a recent book, "Concepts and Programs of Counseling." Just returned to campus is Dr. Richard Lindholm, of the MSC Department of Economics. He recently completed a year with the Federal Reserve Board as fiscal economist. Named an associate editor of the American Mathematical Monthly is Dr. Leroy M. Kelly, assistant professor of mathematics at MSC. Two Michigan State College engineers have become professional registered engineers with the State Board of Regis tration for Architects, Engineers and Land Surveyors. They are D. J. Renwick, associate professor of mechanical engi neering, and Sanford H. Stone, instructor of civil engineering. J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 . . .. 5 "Funny Books" Funny After All, S a ys MSC's Prof. Morton Malter Based on total space devoted to comic stories, 34.1 per cent dealt with crime and detective stories, and 32.2 per cent carried humorous materials, the survey revealed. Over Nine-tenths Acceptable Prof. Malter classified over 90 per cent of comics examined as "acceptable" for publication in newspapers; that is, they would not be rejected because of over emphasis on sex and violence. Dr. Malter concludes: "General attacks upon the comic maga zines are unwarranted. Unquestionably, it is desirable for persons to graduate from reading comic magazines to the reading of more sophisticated material. However, in the course of helping stu dents select more sophisticated material, it seems unreasonable to blanket all comic magazines under the heading 'un acceptable'." the "There are good and bad magazines, with 'unacceptable' ones far out numbered. . .. It seems more desirable to eliminate unacceptable comic maga zines through a selective process of some sort, and make available to readers other books within their experiences." Alter Grading System Of MSC Basic College Classroom work and evaluation of instructors will count more heavily in the future in the comprehensive exami nation system of the Basic College at Michigan State College. Give Three Grades Each Year Under the new system, one-half of the final grade of Basic College students will be awarded by the instructor; the other half will be determined by the compre hensive examination. The grades will be given at the end of each term, begin ning this quarter. The old system provided that the grade of a Basic College student be determined entirely by comprehensive examination. This grade covered an entire year's work rather than the new method of giving three grades for each year. Three difficulties brought about the new system, officials said. First, teachers were convinced that "paper and pencil" tests do not measure some of the im portant course objectives; second, stu dents and parents generally have failed to understand the policy of basing an entire year's credit on one exam; and, finally, the old system was costly and subject to occasional errors. The oft-berated comic magazines have a new supporter in Dr. Morton Malter, assistant professor of education at Michi gan State College. Dr. Malter says that "general attacks upon the comic magazines are unwar ranted." He also debunks the belief that comic books are dominated by crime and violence, and "acceptable" comic magazines far outweigh the "un acceptable" publications. feels that Studies 185 Magazines These statements, based on a survey of 185 magazines published by 17 of the largest "funny" book firms in the U. S., created quite a flurry around the nation when released last month. The young and energetic 31-year-old Malter should know what he is talking about. Regarded as a top national ex pert on pictorial impacts on children, he was research director for Britannica Jr. during 1947 and 1948. He has made several extensive studies this field since coming to Michigan State. in In examining 10,440 comic pages, Prof. Malter found that the books contained the following percentages of materials: advertising, 15.7; western, 11; adven ture, 10.7; animal antics, 10.3; love, 10.2; detective, 9.3; superman stories, 6.9; adult antics, 6.6; and covers, written ma terials, features, adolescent and chil dren's antics, sports stories and jungle stories combined make up 19.2 per cent. Humor and Crime Equal The number of humorous comic maga zines approximately equals the combined number of detective-crime books, and about one-third of all comic magazines is devoted to humor. New Research Launched With $81,829 in Grants Research and other Michigan State College projects received added impetus during October and November the form of gifts and grants from business, government, industry and private indi viduals. in A total of $81,829.53 was received for the college by the State Board of Agri culture, governing body of MSC. Largest Grant Is $10,800 Largest single grant was for $10,800 from the National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Md. The funds are for a study of tubercle bacilli by the Department of Agricultural Chemistry. The college also received $7,023.80 from the Michigan Artificial Breeders association, East Lansing, for a study of sterility in dairy cattle. 6 . . .. T HE R E C O RD SILVER ANNIVERSARY OF SERVICE: Gladys M. Franks, '27, alumni recorder, was honored this fall for 25 years of service to Michigan State Col lege. She was presented with a plaque and a pen and pencil set during a special banquet given in her honor. Miss Franks is shown above receiving the tokens from MSC alumni officials. From left to right, they are: John McGoff, '50; Starr H. Keesler, '41; Miss Franks; and Jack Breslin, '46. The plaque, signed by Advisory Council Chairman Lee O. Benner, '12, read: "A Tribute to Gladys M. Franks—In recognition of her twenty-five years of loyal and conscientious service to Michigan State College and the Alumni Asso ciation." Architect's Drawing of MSCs Proposed New Library MODERN STRUCTURE FOR MODERN NEEDS: Shown above is an archi tect's sketch of the proposed $4,887,500 Library at Michigan State. Plans have been approved by the State Board of Agriculture, which will resubmit its request to the 1952 Michigan Legislature for money with which to begin construction. Also included in building requests will be a $3,850,000 animal industries structure, $300,000 for new sheep and cattle barns and a $69,000 fire-proof seed storage plant. College officials also hope for a building to provide adequate classroom and laboratory facilities for the 1,500 students of business administration—largest single field of study at MSC. Hannah Heads National Committee Investigating Intercollegiate Sports By ALVIE L. SMITH Michigan State President John A. Hannah has been given a tough assign ment by the American Council on Educa tion—the direction of a full-scale study of intercollegiate athletics in the U. S. President Hannah heads a committee of 10 presidents of some of the nation's institutions. Their leading educational purpose: to examine at close range the total college sports picture and to recom mend changes which will maintain these sports as a valuable and respected part of American life. Recent Events Spurred Study Headline events, such as the West Point and William and Mary episodes, injury of Drake's the much-discussed Johnny Bright and others, and an in creasing cloud of suspicions about col lege sports in general, made such a study immediately necessary. The American Council on Education, in naming the committee, said that "re sponsibility for the integrity of higher education, including athletics," is a ma jor concern of college presidents. Many leading educators all over the nation have been concerned for some time with the modern trend of college athletics, particularly football and bas ketball. Over-emphasis, lack of faculty control, subsidization of players by both colleges and alumni groups, and scholar ship standards to be maintained are all important questions which the special ACE committee will try to answer. President Hannah is known and re spected as a staunch friend of college sports, but he has tried to give "storm warnings" since 1948. In 1950, before the Maxwell Club in Philadelphia, he pleaded for "top level" controls and said that sports were too much in the hands of and athletic alumni." He called for simple, enforce recruiting able regulations concerning and subsidizing athletes. Sports, he add ed, must be truly a part of the educa tional program, and "football players should be students first and athletes second." "coaches, directors Will Not Be Easy Task The move by the American Council on Education was applauded all over the nation, but everyone knows that doctor ing the evils of the nation's college sports system is not a simple task. The recom mendations which the ACE committee prescribes will have to be adopted, not by a few institutions, but by all colleges and universities and the National Col legiate Athletic Association. As the Adrian, Mich., "Telegram" com mented: Completion of New MSC Movie Expected March 1 land-grant college system is the central theme of a motion picture now under production at Michigan State College. The story of America's The picture is being made by the Wild through ing Picture Productions, Inc., the MSC Department of Information Services. Exterior filming was done in October, and interior shooting is being completed this month. Is 20-Minute Color Film A 20-minute kodacrome production, the movie will be available about March 1 for distribution to alumni clubs, educa tional groups, high schools, civic or ganizations and lay groups all over the United States. W. Lowell Treaster, director of in formation services, said: living of all "This motion picture will attempt to show the valuable contributions made by land-grant colleges to the welfare and standards of the people within their states. Although the pic ture is being filmed exclusively at Michi it depicts an educational gan State, story land-grant universities such as Wisconsin, Cornell, Minnesota, Ohio State and others." typical of all great The motion picture will include ma terials on Michigan State's teaching, re search, agricultural extension, and con tinuing education programs, in addition to scenes of campus life. "Dr. Hannah and many other educators have seen the handwriting on the wall. They have acted to preserve the good name and the fine tradition of college athletics. If they can give college ath letics a greater degree of sanity, every one will be grateful." J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 . . .. 7 Botfle of Seeds Beat Planted 70 Years Ago Yield 4.7 Per Cent Germination New MSC Fund Trustee By JOHN FITZGERALD, '47 On an autumn day in 1879, Dr. W. J. Beal, professor of botany at what was then called Michigan Agricultural Col lege, turned the last spadeful of dirt on an experiment which was to span almost two centuries. The objects he was burying 70 years ago were bottles filled with seeds—basis of an experiment which still continues at Michigan State College. Purpose Recorded in Diary That night in his diary, he wrote that he hoped from the experiment "to learn something more in regard to the length of time seeds of some of our most com in mon plants would remain dormant the soil and yet germinate when exposed to favorable conditions." In each of the 20 bottles were 1,000 freshly grown seeds, mixed with sand. Dr. Beal originally planned to unearth a bottle every five years and germinate the seeds. This schedule was changed to every 10 years in 1920 to prolong the length of the experiment. Results of the 1950 tests were recently reported in the American Journal of Botany. Dr. H. T. Darlington, of the MSC De partment of Botany, took over the task of reporting on the seeds tests in 1915. Though now retired from the faculty, he continues the work. Eleven bottles have been dug up thus far. the seeds Seeds Planted Immediately When the most recent bottle was un it contained were earthed, transferred flat of sterilized soil and allowed to germinate under ordinary temperature and humid ity of the greenhouse. immediately to a One week after planting, the 70-year- old seeds had yielded 32 seedlings, the tallest being about one inch high. During the next two weeks, 15 more new seed lings appeared, making a total of 47 seeds which grew from the 1,000 seeds Dr. Beal originally placed in the bottle. Less Germination Each Year Records are kept on the seedlings com ing from each species of seed. As each 10-year period goes by, the number of seeds germinating grows smaller. Vitality of the seeds depends on several factors. Seeds belonging to the legume family have thick skins and slow respira tion rates and maintain their vitality over many years. Seeds of annual weeds have thinner skins and a faster rate of respiration, with resulting greater mor tality. Nine bottles of seeds still rest beneath the campus of Michigan State and the 8 . . .. T HE R E C O RD next one will be unearthed in 1960. It will be the year 2040 before the last of the bottles, so carefully buried in 1879, is dug up to provide the final tabulation for Dr. W. J. Beal's seed vitality experi ment. Dr. Ulysses P. Hedrick, U. P. Hedrick, Famous Hort Graduate, Succumbs '93, one of Michigan State's most renowned gradu ates and widely-known horticulturalist, author, plant scientist and agricultural historian, died Nov. 15 in Geneva, N. Y. He was 81 years of age. Directed N. Y. Experiment Station Dr. Hedrick served with the New York Agricultural Experiment Station, Geneva, from 1905 to 1937. From 1928 to 1937 he was director of the station, and since his retirement in 1937, he had been director emeritus. His fruits, series of books on varieties pub of lished from 1908 to 1925, is con sidered one of the substantial contri butions to Ameri can horticulture. The volumes are used as standard references in hor ticulture through- Hedrick out the world. Dr. Hedrick taught at MSC during 1893-95 and 1899-1905, and was head of from the Department of Horticulture 1902 to 1905. His brother, Dr. W. O. Hedrick, '91, is professor emeritus of economics at Michigan State. Autobiography Published in 1948 His 1948 book, "Land of the Crooked Tree," an autobiography of his youth in the Petoskey, Mich., area, is widely read. He was working on a sequel to the book at the time of his death. Member of numerous professional and honorary organizations, Dr. Hedrick was a past president of the American Society for Horticultural Science. He had published 15 other books, most re cent being "A History of Horticulture in America to 1860." include immediate survivors In addition to his brother, Dr. Hed- rick's the widow, Mrs. Amy Plummer Hedrick and a daughter, Mrs. Guy Greene, w'19, both of Geneva, N.Y.; a son, Ulysses P., Jr., Penn Yan, N.Y.; and a sister, Mrs. George Simons, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. NEW FUND BOARD MEMBER: Leonard J. Osterink, '38, has been named to the Board of Trustees of the Michigan State College Fund. Osterink, who is president of the Osterink Construction Company of Grand Rapids, was an outstanding basketball player at MSC. New MSC Scholarships Honor Late Dean Rather A series of scholarships for "mentally and physically gifted" prospective stu dents has been established by the State Board of Agriculture. The awards will be known as Howard C. Rather scholarships, named for the late dean of the Basic College and chair man of the college's athletic eligibility committee. Made by Scholarship Committee The scholarships will be given by the regular scholarship committee, from a fund of $15,000 a year allocated from receipts. No scholarship can athletic exceed $1,000 per year. Conditions of the grants are as follows: "A student receiving a Howard C. Rather scholarship shall possess unusual leadership, demonstrated qualities of mental ability and physical strength and vigor. "Mental ability shall be deemed to have been demonstrated by an entering freshman only if he shall have graduated in the top quartile of his high school or preparatory school class, and by a trans fer student if his previous college record shall have been substantially as high as a 'B' average." Renewal of Rather scholarships will be made if the recipients maintain the same scholastic average required for re newal of all other types of scholarships. Days of Yore By MADISON KUHN and JOSEPH G. DUNCAN The gift of the Henry Chamberlain Memorial Museum, of Three Oaks, to Michigan State College was announced in the last issue of the RECORD. Transfer of ownership was the made by Fred P. Warren, president of Edward K. Warren Foundation, which has operated the museum since 1916. On this page are pictured Mr. Chamberlain and some of the items in the museum. J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 . . .. 9 Above, office of Henry Chamberlain, as it appears in the museum. Right, some mus eum items: an an cient f i r e - f i g h t i ng apparatus; a typical fireside of the early 19th a model train, made in 1850. century; Mr. Chamberlain played a leading part in the affairs of Michigan State for many years. He was one of the men who organized the in 1849, a group which was greatly State Agricultural Society instrumental in inducing the legislature to found the college in 1855. Later, he was a member of the State Board of Agriculture, governing body of the college, from 1883 to 1889 and from 1891 to 1897. A native of Connecticut, Mr. Chamberlain came to Michigan in the early 1840's and settled first at New Buffalo before moving to Three Oaks. During his lifetime, he cleared more than 1,000 acres of land. He also managed a country store and was postmaster. In his political life, he served as a member of the Michigan legislature and attended five national democratic conventions. Mr. Chamberlain died in 1907, at the age of 82. One of his daugh ters was the wife of Edward K. Warren and the mother of Fred P. Warren. 1L L J L J L X J L A - J L J L- 11 m a x x i Ji L ALJLJLILJLJL ' \ i 11AAJJL JJLJLJLJLJI: KELLOGG CENTER: Headquarters for A New of Adult Education By JAMES McCARTNEY, '49 "The adult education movement is the greatest educational movement ever to come down the halls of time." These words were spoken by Robert Maynard Hutchins, former president of the University of Chicago. Today they have become part of the guiding philosophy of Michigan State College. For today, MSC is turning great segments of its time and energy to the task of developing an adult education program second to none in the United States. MSC has cast aside traditional interpretations of the aims of adult education and come up with a broad, all-inclusive term—"continuing education"—to describe its own new and far-reaching goals. "Education is a continuing process," say college officials. "It goes on as long as a person lives. We intend to help as many persons as we can to continue their education far into adult life." Adult education often has meant only a series of night classes in a local high school. At MSC, continuing education includes anything that the college can do to meet the educa tional needs of Michigan's adults. Night classes are a part of it, yes. But also included are hundreds of educational conferences and special courses; on-the-spot training programs in industrial plants; traveling college professors who move from city to city around the state; and special advisors to educational, industrial and business groups which request service. Michigan State's Continuing Education Service is coordinating programs that reach to every corner of the state. today MSC departments provide the wealth of "brain power" neces sary to operate such a program. Together they are helping retailers, insurance men, police recruits, truck drivers, school bus drivers, government workers and dozens of other occupa tional groups in special year-round programs. Meanwhile, the rapidly expanding on-campus conference program is seeking to attack problems in such fields as public health, housing, elementary and high school education, agri culture, business management, economic education and safety. Over 70,000 Attend Conferences Conference attendance figures help to tell the story. Three years ago, some 7,000 persons came to the campus for con ferences or special courses. In 1951, the figure had grown to 70,000. Predictions for 1952 run as high as 125,000. New off-campus educational programs also are growing. in 260 Last year MSC rendered non-agricultural services Michigan communities. Training programs were conducted in industrial plants in Battle Creek, Grand Rapids, Muskegon, Manistee and Traverse City. the Insurance training went on in 30 centers throughout state. And special programs for retailers were conducted in South Haven, Grand Ledge, Vicksburg and Jackson. At the same time, Michigan State extension centers for credit and non-credit work were founded in Midland, Flint and Grand Rapids. And a formal Michigan State Evening College was established on the East Lansing campus to offer more than 50 credit courses. Symbolic of the entire continuing education program is the new and modern Kellogg Center for Continuing Education on the northwest corner of the campus. It is unquestionably the foremost building of its type in the nation. Completed in September at a cost of $2,000,000, the Center serves as headquarters for the Continuing Education Service. It was made possible by a grant of $1,400,000 from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, of Battle Creek. Much more than a mere "hotel," it is equipped to handle all phases of a typical conference operation. The Center con tains 193 hotel-type double rooms to house campus "visiting- students." It has 15 conference rooms of assorted sizes, an auditorium seating 355, a banquet-ballroom to accommodate up to 1,000 persons, and other small rooms for luncheon and dinner meetings. Many of the 350 educational conferences planned on the campus in 1952 will utilize the facilities. In a single day as many as four conferences on vastly-different subjects run off smoothly in the Center. Building Also a Hotel Training Center While the building was created primarily as headquarters for continuing education functions, it also plays a second role. It serves as the most up-to-date and elaborate practical train ing laboratory for hotel and restaurant students in the U.S. Students act as bellhops, elevator operators, room clerks, waiters and waitresses, assistant cooks, housekeepers—even as assistant managers in certain areas of work. This is part of their college training for responsible hotel and restaurant jobs. And they get paid regular student wages for it. In actuality, the student workers are contributing greatly to the ultimate success of the vast continuing education pro gram. While receiving training, they provide service to the thousands of Michigan citizens each year who are seeking to continue with their education at Michigan State. If these citizens are helped in doing their jobs better, in becoming better citizens, or in learning to employ their leisure time more wisely, then MSC will feel it is doing its job well. And at the same time Michigan State will be writing a new chapter in the story of its growth as an instrument of service to all of the people of Michigan. Key to Pictures: 1. Leadership training for industry 2. Economic education for teachers and lay persons 3. Fur breeders—one of many agricultural conferences 4. Workshop for insurance men—typical of numerous services for Michigan businesses 5. Truck driver training 6. Police recruit training 7. Hotel and restaurant students in cooking labs 4* , „ - . W ^ Tt '•«•** Press Box Report on Heads 1952 Football Team SPARTAN SPORTS By FRED STABLEY and BUD ERICKSON, '48 Football Bows Out "It was the greatest season in Michi gan State football history!" There seemed no challenge this blunt assertion by many old line Michi the gan State observers magnificent undefeated the 1951 Spartans. in view of record of to Only one other MSC team had an un blemished slate, and that 1913 aggrega tion didn't have anything approaching a rugged modern schedule. Savor those delicious scores again! Oregon State, 6-0; Michigan, 25-0; Ohio State, 24-20; Marquette, 20-14; Penn State, 32-^1; Pittsburgh, 53-26; Notre Dame, 35-0; Indiana, 30-26, and Colo rado, 45-7. The Spartans, riding a 15- game winning streak, were ranked sec ond in all major national polls. At season's end, there were many honors for Spartan coaches and players. Ten seniors were named to bowl teams. Four made All-American first strings. (See story on page 13.) Many others MASTER'S TROPHY TO MUNN: Head Coach "Biggie" Munn receives the Master's Trophy, emblematic of outstanding contribution to Michigan State athletics during the past year, from Idus Burgess, Worshipful Mas ter of Capitol Lodge, S. O. No. 66, F. and A. M., Lansing. At left is Athletic Director Ralph Young. At right is Wilfrid Smith, sports re porter of the Chicago Tribune. 12 . .. . T HE R E C O RD received honorable mentions. Opposing teams' "All Opponent" selections were liberally sprinkled with Spartans. received Flint's Don Coleman, to the surprise the of absolutely no one, was given "Governor of Michigan" award as the most valuable player. Guard Frank the Kapral, Courtdale, Pa., Potsy Ross award as the athlete who best combined athletics and scholarship. Doug Weaver, Goshen, Ind., was given the coveted "oil can" award as squad humor man. Chicago's Don McAuliffe, the bruis ing left halfback, was named captain for 1952, and Jackson's Dean Garner won a special award for his improved play. in Coach "Biggie" Munn came for honors, too. He was given the Master's Trophy by Lansing area Masons, was selected to coach the offense on the East team in the East-West Shrine game, and rated third in "Coach of the Year" bal loting. It was a season all will long remember. Basketball Bows In Football season behind, winter sports, the particularly basketball, sports arena at Michigan State. took over As basketball gets into full swing, the familiar names of seven lettermen stand out—forwards Bill Bower, Lief Carlson, Bill Eckstrom and Erik Furseth; center Bob Carey; and guards Sonny Means and Gordon Stauffer. But it's a good bet that sophomores hold the key to any real team success. This year, the Spartans have some thing they sorely lacked last season— sophomore bench strength. As these top second-year men develop, Coach "Pete" Newell's squad should become increas ingly tough. Probably the best prospect is Hugh MacMaster, a 6'6" center from Hazel Park. He has all the attributes a top- notch college basketball player needs— size, speed, shooting ability and the de sire to learn. role Also playing a big in Coach Newell's plans to better last year's 10-11 record is DeNeal Hartman, Ft. Wayne, Ind. Hartman plays either center or forward and is invaluable as a rebounder. Keith Stackhouse, a highly-touted prep eager from Bourbon, Ind., fits in at for ward. Although he is a player who might be overlooked by many coaches because of five-foot-five-inch his height, Brooklyn's the 1952 football CAPT. DON McAULIFFE: Head ing team will be hard-driving halfback Don Mc Auliffe, Chicago junior. McAuliffe was leading ground gainer (566 yards); leading scorer to (63 points); and second only Quarterback Al Dorow total offense (629 yards). this year's in fans. Rickey Ayala already is a favorite with Spartan the Spartan offensive system, Ayala sparkles in play-making, dribbling and ball- handling. Ideally suited for Other Spartan possibilities are Jim Schlatter, Ft. Wayne, Ind., guard; Dick Wesling, guard from Milwaukee, Wis.; and Paul Hinkin, center-forward from Saginaw. Only prediction from Coach Newell: "This team will have plenty of fight down to the final gun every game." Spartan fans who cheered last year's spirited, never-say-die squad, knew that this was one promise Newell was sure to keep. Winter Sports Preview in to a good start Ice hockey: Off sextet December games, the Spartan under new Coach Amo Bessone figures to be greatly improved over 1949 and 1950 but still some distance from being a big winner. An even-up won-lost record in the 22 games would be quite an achievement. Boxing: Coach George Makris should have perhaps the best team in Spartan history if things break right. Watch a freshman named Herb Odom, of Flint, at 135 pounds. NCAA champs Jed Black, Janesville, Wis., and Detroit's "Chuck" Spieser are back. Swimming: The splashers lost heavily from the squad that last year took sec ond both in the NCAA and Big Ten meets, but canny Coach Charley McCaf- Michigan State's All-Time All-Americans By FRED STABLEY Every college or university playing first class football has a royal line of "All-Americans" to which it pays hom age. One of the youngest, most virile these athletic and rapidly-growing of dynasties (See cover). is Michigan State's. them Wagner Was First Ail-American It wasn't founded until 1935, although the Spartans, and before the Michigan Aggies, had been playing foot ball since 1896, and playing it mighty well at times, too. Sig Wagner, the ag gressive Lansing guard, was the first to hit the "big time." Jerry DePrato, Hugh Blacklock, Lyman Frimodig, Carp Julian or a dozen other great old timers did not make the select elevens simply because they cavorted on the gridiron long be fore their Alma Mater met the special set of circumstances that must exist to produce "All-Americans." These circumstances, in a word, are: An outstanding team playing a major schedule before big crowds and blessed with tremendous press, radio, magazine and more recently television publicity. By the mid-1930's, with Charley Bach- man's Michigan State teams defeating the likes of Michigan, Carnegie Tech, Kansas, Missouri and Texas A. and M. with regularity, for the first time were right. the circumstances Wagner, today a successful engineer living in suburban Detroit, had what it the selectors. He was took to attract small—about 135 pounds and 5-11 in height—but he was quick and hard hitting, a superb blocker and deadly smart tackier. Moreover, he was a player who rarely made mistakes. He was tabbed by the United Press, New York Sun and Liberty Magazine for first team honors. later his was one of The same fall that Wagner scaled the heights, a tall, slender kid from Mt. Clemens, Mich., entered school. Johnny Pingel was an unknown then, but three the most years glamorous names in college sports. An Orange Bowl appearance lent prestige, and Pingel was given the nod by the Associated Press and other selectors in 1933. A halfback, Pingel was a triple threat tradition—hand some, lean as a whippet, a fine passer and a superb kicker and runner. Pingel, later a professional player and coach at Michigan State, today is an advertising executive in Detroit. the richest in "All-American" circumstances broke down after Wagner and Pingel. Spartan teams weren't winning enough and pub licity resultantly had fallen off. Hit First "Jackpot" in 1949 In 1949, as the climax to three con secutive "Biggie" fine seasons under Munn, in which Spartan teams won 19, lost 7 and tied 2, Michigan State hit the first of three successive "All-American" jackpots. Ed Bagdon and Don Mason, the mag- nificient team of guards, and rambling halfback Lynn Chandnois all made it. Bagdon was named to first teams of the United Press, Football Writers (Look Magazine) and NEA. Bagdon also an nexed the Dr. John Outland trophy as the outstanding guard or tackle in the country. Mason scored on the Paramount News and Football News teams. Chand- free has a terrific trio in Detroit's Clark Scholes, NCAA dash champ; Bert Mc- Lachlan, Denver, Colo., Big Ten middle style champ, and Hal distance Shoup, Pontiac, back stroker. The team will be tough as usual. free Wrestling: Fendley Collins lost two Big Ten champs in George Bender and (Gibbons was NCAA Gene Gibbons titlist, too), but he'll be back with a fair team spearheaded by Orris Bender, George's brother, from Lakewood, Ohio. Top newcomers are Bob Hoke, an Okla homa City NAAU champ last year, and Cleveland's Eddie Casalicchio, an NAAU runner-up. Track: Veteran Coach Karl Schlade- man always has a team that is tough to beat. This one is no exception. Watch for Dearborn's Dick Henson and Flint's Art John Ingram, dashmen; hurdler Corbelli, Buffalo, N. Y.; and distance runners Jim Kepford, Muskegon, Mickey Walter, Buffalo, N. Y., and Dick Jarrett, Gymnastics: Mel Stout Oak Lawn, 111., to shine. Ditto for shot- putter Don Schiesswohl from Saginaw. is gone but Chicago's Bob Feldmeier is the key man in what should be another good team un der George Szypula. Others to watch are Al Hannas, Western Springs, 111., and John Walker, Niles, on the trampoline. Fencing: Coach Charles Schmitter has Lansing's Raymond Totte, foil, Bill Pier- son, East Lansing, and Fred Freiheit, Charlotte, sabre, around whom to build. The team should be at least on a par with last year's, which won seven of ten dual meets. Coed Is Olympic Hopeful A graceful freshman coed from Michi gan State College has her big brown eyes focused on Oslo, Norway, and a berth on the U. S. Olympic figure-skating team. Already the holder of countless awards, 19-year-old Virginia Baxter spends sev- nois clicked with Collier's, International News Service, United Press, Look Maga zine, and Sporting News. In 1950, as a climax to yet another fine season of eight wins and one loss, halfback Everett "Sonny" Grandelius and end Dome Dibble attained the pro mised land. Grandelius was the powerful running back who gained over 1,000 yards from scrimmage, and Dibble was the all-purpose end who sparkled both offensively and defensively, Grandelius Inter made the Associated Press and national News Service first teams, among others, and Dibble was nominated by Look Magazine. Record Set in 1951 But this 1951 season was the one to remember! The team went all the way victoriously, nine straight wins without defeat. A new season attendance record for a Michigan State team was estab lished. The barrage of publicity was unprecedented. The "All-American" at mosphere was super-perfect, and four Spartans received the top accolades. Don Coleman, the 178-pound wonder player from Flint, was a unanimous choice of selectors at a tackle post. Giant end and captain Bob Carey made most of the teams. Al Dorow clicked with International News Service. Defensive the back Jim Ellis was honored by Players' Ail-American. the Spartan line has reached eleven, an appropriate number for the game of football. Wagner! Pin gel! Mason! Bagdon! Chandnois! Grande lius! Dibble! Coleman! Carey! Dorow! Ellis! A great lineage, of which every Spartan follower can be proud. royal Thus eral hours every day practicing on the ice at Demonstration Hall. Virginia has been under the tutelage of Bill Swallen- der of the Detroit Skating Club for the past seven years. She also has been a major attraction at college-sponsored ice reviews during the past two years. On the basis of previous awards, the Detroit skating star was given a good chance of copping a place on the 1952 Olympic team at tryouts in late Decem ber at Indianapolis. In 1948, Virginia won the national junior women's figure skating title at Colorado Springs. In 1949, she stepped into the senior women's competition and placed third in the national finals. She international finished in in competition at Paris, France, also 1949. seventh the In 1950, Virginia took third in both the North American competition held at Philadelphia and senior women's division competition. the National J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 . . .. 13 LET $ GO II CLUBBING it By STARR H. KEESLER, '41 year '26; terms: Mrs. Lloyd Straffon, T. B. Poole, '22; and Kenneth Landsburg, '26; one year terms: Mrs. Martin Tweedie, w'23; Ray Severance, '26, and Joe Davison, '46. Clintonites Gather President Dale Anderson, '36, presided over a meeting of Clinton County alumni, Oct. 24. Approximately 46 members at tended the meeting held in St. Johns. to Starr Keesler spoke the group briefly on "College and Alumni News," and concluded the program with a movie showing of the Ohio State-Michigan State football game. Elected to the club's board of directors were: Myrtle Salisbury, '39; Fred Lewis, '48; Cy Trembly, '38; Blake Miller, '16; Henry Beechem, '32; Wendell Brewbaker, '39; Mildred Pocius, '39; Fred Perry, '42; Ed Ryon, '32, and Leland Cribbs, '30. Iosco Entertains Students The top 10 per cent of Iosco County high school seniors were guests at the Nov. 5 meeting of the Iosco County Alumni Club. Alumni and students num bered 75. Paul Dixon, '28, club president, welcomed the high school seniors. Harold Clark, '24, program chairman, introduced John McGoff, '50, assistant director of alumni relations at MSC, who spoke to the group on, "Notes to High School Seniors." In addition, the campus film "Postmark East Lansing," and the Buckeye-Spartan football game movie were shown. Calhoun Alumni Meet Some 100 members of the Calhoun County Alumni Club met at the Post House in Battle Creek, on Nov. 16. Don Van Gorder, '48, club president, presided over the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Alleman, '48, were in charge of program planning. Alleman is vice-presi dent cf the club. The evening's activities consisted of two football films, the MSC-OSU game and the Spartan-Irish tussle, with nar ration by John McGoff. Ionia Alums Elect The annual election of Ionia County Alumni Club was held Tuesday, Nov. 13, in Ionia. Twenty members at tended the meeting which was high lighted with the showing of the campus the MICHIGAN CLUBS Active Genesee Alumnae The second fall meeting of the Genesee County Alumnae Club was held Oct. 18 at the home of Mrs. Harold Ensinger, '34, 1126 W. Vernon Dr., Flint. Mrs. En- singer was hostess to 31 members at the club's fall business meeting and canasta and bridge party. Tea committee for the gathering in cluded Patricia Brain, '47, Glenora Irwin, '50, and Mrs. Charles Rice, '48. Door prizes were won by Mrs. Harold Hiscock, '26, Mrs. Jackson Livesay, '37, and Muriel Young. St. Joseph Fall Meeting Centreville was the hub of alumni activity in St. Joseph County, Oct. 16. Some 65 club members turned out for the annual fall business meeting. Jack Breslin, '46, MSC's alumni field secretary, was on hand to narrate this year's Green and White-Wolverine foot ball game. Club members elected the following- officers: L. B. Watson, D.V.M. '43, presi dent; Mrs. L. Weir, '43, vice-president; Duncan Leitch, '48, secretary; and L. J. Vincent, '25, treasurer. Sanilac Club Reorganizes At a reorganizational meeting of the Sanilac County Alumni Club, some 60 members turned out Oct. 23. Charles Hill, professor of written and spoken English, presented a humorous the World talk entitled, "Laugh and Laughs with You." Starr Keesler, '41, director of alumni relations, narrated the Spartan-Ohio State game movies. Al Hall, '42, was toastmaster. Officers elected for the coming year are: William Corbishley, '51, president; Ken Landsburg, '26, vice-president; Mrs. Martin Tweedie, w'23, secretary; and T. B. Poole, '22, treasurer. Club members also elected a new board three '31, '51, Mrs. Virginia '42; two of directors. Those elected for year William Corbishley, Tribbs, terms were: Russell Waite, '46, and Albert Hall, 14 . . . . TH E R E C O RD film, "Postmark East Lansing." Club members also viewed movies of the Pitt- MSC, and the Michigan-Michigan State football games. Elected club officers were: Ken McKee, '42, president; Shelton Grossman, '38, vice-president; Janice Thomas, '46, sec retary; and William Trembath, M.A. '49, treasurer. Elected to the board of direc tors were: Louis Webb, '39; Ken Schep- ers, '29; Henry Welch, w'08. Missaukee-Wexford Meet Some 125 members and friends of the Missaukee-Wexford County Alumni Club met Nov. 1 in Cadillac. Club members discussed sponsoring the MSC Men's Glee Club in Cadillac during the musical group's spring tour of Michi gan. John McGoff, of the alumni office, explained details of sponsorship. The meeting also included a showing of the OSU-Michigan State game, and the Wol verine-Spartan game. Club president, C. G. Dickinson, '27, presided at the meeting. Officers elected were: John English, w'24, president; John T. Bradley, '50, vice-president; Mary S. Johnson, '18, secretary; and Mrs. L. W. Barnes, '25, treasurer. The club's new board of directors is: Mrs. David Sjoberg, '35; Leon Nugent, '36; George Mills, '20; William E. Baker, '25; Leon J. Jankoski, sc; Mrs. Arthur W. Dewey, '34. Bay Football Bust the Nov. 19 meeting of The Bay City Country Club was the scene of the Michigan State College Bay County Alumni Club. Seventy-five members were present for the affair. Dunbar McBride, '25, club president, was chairman for the evening. Program chairman was Frank Sweeney, '09. MSC representatives attending the meeting were Tom King, dean of students, and Starr Keesler, alumni director. Elected to the club's board of direc tors were: Frank Sweeney, '09; Charles B. Park, '25; Paul Briggs, '42; Howard Mitchell, '32; Jean Martens, '48; Lome A. Cameron, '50; John C. Knapp, '48. Genesee Alumni Stag The annual fall Genesee Alumni Club Stag saw a turnout of some 200 alumni. Walt Lueck, '38, club president presided. The evening's activities were high lighted with moving pictures of the Ohio football State and Penn State-MSC games. Turkey-Burgers at Hillsdale Hillsdale County alumni met at the Hillsdale County Fair Grounds for a fall get-together. Mike Radke, '33, club president, intro duced John McGoff who spoke on college and alumni news. In addition to his talk, Fifty-five Rochester club members met for their annual fall meeting, held at Johnson's Restaurant in Rochester. John Harrington, '43, president, re ported on Homecoming activities at Michigan State, and the club president's workshop held at Homecoming. Earle Baxter, '19, reminisced on his early years at State, when M.A.C.'ers won their first victory over Ohio State. Starr Keesler, spoke briefly and nar rated the Ohio State-MSC and MSC-U of M game movies. New York City—New York City alumni concluded fall activities with a meeting held in New York City, Nov. 2. the Netherland The meeting, held at Club in Rockefeller Plaza, was attended by 110 members. for Earl Elwood, '35, club president and chairman introduced the evening, Alumni Director Starr Keesler, who spoke on "College and Alumni News." In addition to his talk, Keesler narrated the MSC-OSU and Michigan movies. Michiana Club Meets Fifteen inches of snow and wintry winds were not enough to hold off 60 members of the Michiana Club, who met in Mishawauka, Ind., Nov. 7. Bob Allewardt, '48, acted as toastmas- ter at the club's fall banquet. During after-dinner announced activities, he coming year's slate of officers. President for the ensuing year is Roland "Duke" Fleming, w'50. John McGroff spoke to the group on the "Educational Philosophy of MSC" and showed the Michigan-MSC movies. Chicago Football Bust Some 650 alumni and friends from the Chicago area met at the Morrison Hotel, Oct. 12, for film showings of the Wol verine and Ohio State games. Dayton Alums Gather In Dayton, Ohio, some 30 members gathered at the local YMCA Oct. 30 for their fall meeting. Glenn Bergman, '47, club president, and Robert Swiss, '41, were in charge of the meeting. Representing Michigan State College was Starr Keesler, who spoke on "College and Alumni News." The program con cluded with a showing of the Ohio State and Michigan-Michigan State football game movies. Pre-game at Indianapolis On the eve of the Michigan State- Indiana game, some 45 members of the Indianapolis Alumni Club met in that city for their fall meeting. Principal speaker of the evening was Starr Keesler, who was introduced by Bill Vissing, '46, club president. "Postmark East Lansing" and the MSC-Ohio State football game films were shown. the Notre Dame and Michigan-MSC game movies were shown. Following the film showing, 60 alumni and high school students attending were treated to a turkey-burger snack. Football Reigns Alumni clubs were winding up their football film showings with the close of Michigan State's most successful football season in over 30 years. Since the first of the season, approxi mately 4,000 alumni and friends have witnessed football movies sponsored by alumni clubs. At Jackson, 350 members turned out to see films of the Michigan-Michigan State game on Oct. 18. Approximately the same number watched movies of MSC vs. Notre Dame and Indiana, Nov. 27. Oakland County hit the 200 marker for its turn-out October 18. The Bir mingham Community House was filled to overflowing with fans who watched the Green and White-University of Michigan and Ohio State game movies. Kalamazoo county alumni also saw the Spartans vs. the Wolverines and Ohio State via the movie screen at a meeting held in Kalamazoo Oct. 22. More than 65 members attended, and Dick Beem, '42, president, was meeting chairman. Michigan State alumni in and around Manistee watched movies of the Green and White against Ohio State. One hun dred members turned out Nov. 15 for the meeting at which Tom Stege, '48, club president, presided. Oceana alums invited in all high school students of the county Oct. 23 to see the films of the MSC-OSU game and Michigan-Michigan State game. Mrs. Lyle Tompkins, '33, club president, pre sided. inviting Two other clubs local and county high school students to meetings were the Chippewa-Luce-Mackinac Club and the Benzie-Grand Traverse-Leelanau Club. The former held its meeting at the Soo Nov. 5 with some 75 attending. The Grand Traverse group met the following evening, Nov. 6. Both groups witnessed film showings of the Spartans vs. Michi gan and Ohio State. OUT-OF-STATE CLUBS N.Y. State Clubs Meet Schenectady—Schenectady, New York alumni of Michigan State College met at the Edison Club in nearby Rexford for their fall meeting, Oct. 31. Some 50 members turned out to hear Starr Kees- ler bring them up to date on recent col lege activities. In addition to Keesler's film, "Postmark remarks, East Lansing" was shown plus the Ohio State-Michigan State football game. the campus Rochester—Nov. 1 was the date of meeting for Rochester, New York alumni. CLUB PRESIDENTS HOLD WORKSHOP: MSC alumni club presidents held their first annual workshop on the Spartan campus Homecoming weekend. Attending were, left to right, third row: Jack Breslin, '46; D. McBride, '25; Richard Mosher, '47; K. C. Festerling; Charles E. Gotta, '33; R. M. Leonardson, '35; E. S. Wessborg, '39; C. C. Higbie, '22; and John McGoff, '50. Second row: Charles B. Jarratt, '42; Maurice Coady, w'42; James VanZylen, '30; George Bylsma, '31; J. Harry Burris, '30; Emmett Greenwood, '23; John Harrington, '43; John Rogers, '29; and Starr Keesler, '41. First row: Wilbur D. Emmons, '31; Paul D. Gibson, '22; Mrs. Robert Chase, '47; Mrs. William C. Martin, '48; Dr. L. B. Watson, '43; Charles Leverett, '43; Phil Munson, '48; Max Dietz, '43; and Earl McKim, '35. J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 . . .. 15 New~L is boss man of his own paper now, having pur chased the Greenville (Mich.) News. ' 19 *»*• Germany where he has charge of . ' Q1 Genevieve R. Davis, who received her is "* M.S. from MSC this past summer, supervisor of home economics in the schools of Bay City, Mich., where she lives at 205 N. Dean St. ^ ° '- Curnel S. Hampton is stationed in the . . military W. J. McCune, assistant general manager of sales of Sharon Steel Corp. of Sharon, Pa., has been appointed chief of the stainless steel section of . . . Alta Parks National Production Authority. heads the public library in Gary, Ind., where she lives at 4722 E. 10th Ave. the extension department of instruction program in Europe. ABOUT THESE ALUMNI By GLADYS M. FRANKS, '27 interesting, some v wrote from the Kingsley VM Under date of Oct. 31, H. Ray Kingsley (coincidence?) Hotel in London: "On this 16-month European trip I have had many thrill ing, experiences and adventures. I carried my 16 mm. movie camera and exposed about 2700 feet of films which I mailed to Rochester to be developed and sent to my Chicago home. Now I am anxious to see the film story of my trip. I saw scenes of many of the wonderful and grand engineering Europe: snow-capped Alps: great feats, canals bridges, Auto-Bahn; the greatest modern steel plant in British Empire located in Wales, recently dedicated ; all the capitals of Europe and many more historic and beautiful cities, and the greatest and probably most interesting city for the past six weeks have been roaming London, of the world. It is fascinating and I would like to stay for months but I must hurry back home to see my five grand children before they grow beyond me." Mr. Kingsley expected to have (Mabel Thanksgiving dinner with Mrs. Kingsley Downey, '05), their three children and the grand children. 'f\A Jessie Palmer Rork, widow of Frank C. Rork, '03, lives in Los Angeles, Calif., at 4147x/2 Somerset Dr. . . . Harry Williamson gives his new address as 1446 Eagle Point, Clark Lake. #f l fi G °rd °n Stuart, for nearly 30 years head w^ of photographic department for Foster and Kleiser, outdoor advertisers, has retired and is living at 8917 B Burton Way, Los Angeles, Calif. 'f\Q Col. William D. Frazer, U. S. Army, •*** Retired, is director of civil defense for King County, Wash., where he and Mrs. Frazer (Shirley Gardner) live at 3102 W. Laurelhurst Dr., Seattle, Wash. ' l ft R. G. Crane gives his new address as *"" R. 2, Friedricktown, Ohio. ' l fl Grace Ellis Roberts has moved in Pasa- ^ ^" dena, Calif, to 642 N. Chester Ave. '1 Q Harry A. Schuyler, vice president of ™" Exchange Lemon Products Co., Corona, Calif., visited the campus early in November. His home is in Whittier, Calif., where he is a neigh bor to Verne Steward, '15, of 14828 LaSexta St. * 'I "7 Twenty-five years of helping students solve emotional aspects of life that might cause them to fall physically ill, fail classes, cheat on examinations or drink excessively was marked in mid-October by the Yale University Student Mental Hygiene Service. The staff of the service paid tribute at a dinner to Dr. Clements C. Fry, chief psychiatrist, for his 25th continuous year of work in mental health at the university. At the same time a report was released showing that, during the last two and a half decades, more than 8,000 students with emotional problems had been aided. . . . George H. Dettling is spending the winter in Florida where he may be reached at 625 S.E. 25th Ave., Fort Lauderdale. . . . Frank C. Spencer is located at 908 McKinley Ave., Bay City, where he is salesman for the New Way En&melware and Hardware company of Detroit. ' l ft D r" H o w a rd c- A b Dott and Gertrude XV Webster were married Oct. 20 and are 16 . .. . T HE R E C O RD living in Sioux Falls, S. D., where he is professor of biology at Sioux Falls College. . . . Percy H. Gates is tool room superintendent at Industrial Brownhoist Corp. in Bay City where he lives at 303 N. Lincoln. flQ J. William Cheetham is assistant director * ** of purchases at Evans Products in Ply mouth, Mich., and lives in Northville at 547 W. Main. 'Q 1 Allen Arnold has his photographic studios at 211 Theatre bldg., Birmingham, Mich. •* . . . Meta Ewing is chairman of the mathematics department at Bay City (Mich.) Junior College. ' OO Dr. R. H. Westveld, professor and chair- man of the Department of Forestry at the University of Missouri, has revised the second edition of his book "Forestry in Farm Manage ment," published in September by John Wiley & Sons. The book, originally co-authored by the late Ralph H. Peck, discusses the importance of the farm forest as an integral part of the forest. ' OQ Ward R. Schafer is president of Schafer- ** Wright, Inc., in Portland, Ore., where he (Marion Forbes, w'25) make and Mrs. Schafer their home at 6045 S.W. Taylors Ferry Rd. 'Q C Col. Donald H. Smith is stationed at *^ First Army Headquarters, Governors Island, N. Y. ' OP " ** Forrest "Sparky" Starrett is sales engi- neer for Knight-Randall Co. in Detroit and lives in Franklin at 31750 Brandingham. ' 0 *7 P. R. Biebesheimer, Wayne County agri- cultural agent, was presented with a *• national award for outstanding service to agri culture at a meeting of the National Association of County Agricultural Agents recently held in Memphis, Tenn. At the same meeting a distin guished service award was made to Blair Wood man, . . . Tom Sherburne has exchanged the eagle on his shoulder for the silver star of brigadier general. He is stationed at Fort Bragg, N. C, with the 82nd Air- born division. '25, Shiawassee County agent. " ' QQ Helen Klute is chief dietitian at Bronson hospital in Kalamazoo. Mich. . . . Jim and Annie Laurie (Walls, '26) McElroy are back in East Lansing again, living at 827 Sunset Lane, while he is midwestern factory representative for the Protectowire Co. '29 * Opal Gilpin is secretary to the director in purchases at Miami University Oxford, Ohio. She notes: "Miami is rich in tra ditions. It is most widely known as the Mother of Fraternities. It was while William Holmes McGuffey was professor at Miami University from 1825-1836 that he compiled the famous McGuffey readers and spellers which were to play such an important part in the education of the West." . . . Margaret Hubbard Bell manages the high school cafeteria in Alpena, Mich. . . . Harold M. Olds, chief inspector at the Oldsmobile Forge plant in superintendent. Lansing, has been named night Joining the company as an engineering depart ment clerk after graduation, he was made stan dards engineer in 1946 and chief inspector in 1949. ' Q rt Dale Stafford, managing editor of the •W Detroit Free Press since Sept. 1, 1945, for Michigan Bell Telephone ' QQ **** with the late Earl Clark, Felix Anderson and Clair Johnson, who '26, have an engineering firm in Pontiac, are the designers of a revolutionary new type of concrete bridge under construction near Detroit. . . . Rowland W. Blair the Ottawa National is assistant supervisor of Forest and with Mrs. Blair and their two daugh ters lives at 209 W. Coolidge Ave., Ironwood, Mich. . . . Harry Lawford is division commercial superintendent in Saginaw, Mich., where he and Mrs. Lawford (Evelyn Hardy, '32) live at 1653 Glendale. . . . Enno W. Schraft, who has been associated with Reo Motors, Inc., for 18 years, has been elevated to the post of controller. . . . Walter G. Thomp son, field engineer for Motor Wheel Corp. since 1948, has been named Duo-Therm district manager for the central northwestern United States. He has been with Duo-Therm since 1936, except for four years war leave. He is now a Lt. Col. com manding Reserve group. the 5003 rd Research and Development in *I\A " * the college recent concert Clark L. Brody, Jr., is first clarinetist in the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and auditorium the afforded him a reunion with his college friends and a visit with his parents, Clark, '04, and Mrs. Brody of Lansing. . . . Gottfried C. Graf received the University of Minnesota at his Ph.D. from August commencement ceremonies. . John Schuch and his wife and two daughters are living at 13680 Capitol, Detroit, where he is midwest representative for the Jarrell-Ash Co. of Boston, manufacturers of spectrographic and optical equip ment. . . their the birth of lege, Wilberforce, Ohio, ' QC Albert Baker, coach at Central State Col- ^ J *' received his masters at State in September. . . . Jacqueline Baribeau Mueller, her Lt. Col. husband and their two children, are living at 320-3 Cody Lane, Fort Leavenworth, Kan. . . . Mr. and Mrs. James C. Gorin (Louise Collins) of 2801 Lake Ave., Wil- fourth mette, 111., announce child and third son, Bart Collins, Sept. 25. . . . Walter and Mary Belle (Wickersham, '37) Nieder- meier and their two children are living at 354 Pershing Blvd., Oradell, N. J. He is a staff engi neer with Shell Oil Co. in New York City. . . . John Pomeroy is affiliated with the Institute of Inter-American Affairs in Washington, D. C, and expects to be assigned to a post in South America early in 1952. . . . Florence Drive, Elm Grove, Wis., is the address of Robert A. Thompson, Up john Company's sales representative in southeast ern Wisconsin. . . . Jon Young teaches at Eastern High School, Lansing, where he lives at 108 S. Hosmer. ' QC Mr. and Mrs. Jack Seibert (Frances Wil- **** son) of 557 Cornell Ave., East Lansing, announce the birth of their son, Edward Wilson, July 22. . . . "Red" Ruhl, more formally known as Richard Frederick, celebrated his first birth day, Sept. 17. He has a 3 Vj-y ear-old sister, Gretchen, and they are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Ruhl (Dorothy Jean Works) of 3509 Briggs Blvd., N.E., Grand Rapids. *" 'QrF Harold Fairbanks and Marilyn Markus- sen were married July 20 and are living in Morgantown, W. Va., where he is associate professor of chemical engineering at the univer sity. . . . Robert and Kathryn (Kamschulte, '40) Goodwin and their three sons are living at R. 1, Bourbonnais, 111., while he is project engineer for U. S. Rubber at the Joliet Arsenal. . .. J. Donald Hittle, executive officer of the naval ROTC at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, is now a full colonel in the marine corps. . . . Lillian Holmes Carper and her husband, Richard, own and oper ate the A and W Drive-in at 902 E. Grand River Ave., Lansing. . . . The sympathy of the class is extended to Ture Johnson of Burton, Ohio, whose wife died Sept. 13. . . . Lt. Col. Lawrence Larsen is on the ROTC staff at the University of Akron, Akron, Ohio. ley J. Tacon. #A1 the birth to announce "We're pleased of our son, Marc Howard, Oct. 18," write Julian and Stella Balasses Gilbert from 836 N. Melborn, Dearborn, and continue: "If all goes third generation as planned, Marc will be the '08, and to attend State. Grandpa Roy Gilbert, Grandma Hazel Kelsey Gilbert, w ' l l, were the first." . . . Anson W. Hilborn owns and manages in Detroit where Garage and Door Mart, Inc., he and Mrs. Hilborn (June Talbot, w'42) live at 845 Burlingame. . . . Marquita A daughter, Michelle, was born Aug. 2 to Dr. and Mrs. Oscar Paul (Estelle Freedlander) of 62 Allenby, Tel-Aviv, Israel. Irland is supervisor of home economics for the schools of Kalamazoo, Mich., where she lives at 310 W. Vine St. . . . Dean Radtke owns a Skelgas and appliance store in Springfield, Mo., where he lives at 1716 E. Grand St. . . . Dr. and Mrs. F. G. Yabsley, of Earlville, 111., announce the birth of Francis George II, Oct. 20. 'Afi Walter and Elaine (Lantta, '48) Beard- ** slee are living at 147 E. 10th St., Tra verse City, Mich., where he is on the teaching staff of the newly established Northwestern Michigan College. . . . Charles R. Billig owns the Wayside Greenhouses in Ithaca, Mich. . . . Fred and Sylvia Swensen Elliot and their year-old daughter, Chris tine Yvonne, are living at R. 1, Charleston, 111., where he is in his third year as band director in the high school. He also has a junior high band and grade school instrumental work. Both first junior and senior high bands received his division ratings in their district contest last year. . . . Capt. Alex Haddad is stationed in San An tonio, Tex., where he and his wife and two daughters live at 419 N. Audubon St. from his Karl K. Kilgren, engineer with the Calif. Re search Corp., is located at 111% S. Painter, Whit- tier, Calif. . . . Lt. Irving Olitzky was called to teaching position at military service Rutgers University, and is chief, bacteriology dept., Second Army Area Medical Laboratory, Fort George G. Meade, Md. . . . Carol Ann Ray- hill is an instructor at Trinity College in Wash ington, D. C, and lives in Mt. Rainier, Md., at 2716 Upshur St., Apt. 6. . . . Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Hanley of 1501 Mason, Dearborn, announce the birth of Michael Patrick, Nov. 18. (Virginia Siegmund) Michael Collingwood was born May 17 to John and Jean (Collingwood, '46) Spelman of 300 Lake Court, St. Joseph, Mich. His father is in the law firm of Killian and Banyen and is also assistant prosecuting attorney for Berrien County. Should he decide to enroll at MSC he will be the 4th Major Eugene W. Kelley, USMC, is stationed in Monterey, Calif., 1198 David Ave. . . . William Shea, assistant professor of speech at the Univer sity of Miami, Miami, Fla., was recently elected president of the Florida Speech Association. . . . Shirley VanAuken Fick and her husband, Nelson, and their two children, are moving newly completed home at 9 Kra-Nur Dr., Davison, Mich. . . . John and Betty (Farmer, w"42) Van Houten and their three boys are living in Paul Spur, Ariz. . . . Capt. Wales Vaughn is assistant professor of military science and the University of Arizona, Tucson. tactics at their into 'AG ^r' a n t* Mrs. Charles A. Baryames of ™* 1119 South Lawn, East Lansing, an the birth of a future "Miss America," nounce Cynthia Elaine, Aug. 31. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Donald V. Brown, of 1484 Wyoming, Schenectady, N. Y., announce the birth of their first child, Timothy John, May 1. . . . Jane Banker was born May 17 to Mr. and Mrs. Clinton R. Clark, of 328 Fern- wood Dr., Akron, Ohio. Mr. Clark, who was recalled by the Navy in Sept. 1950, is aboard the . . . Kenneth and Harriette Ysberg USS Leyte. Cleary and son, Kim, have four-year-old their returned to their home in Bridgeport, Mich., after this spending treatment summer. Harriette was trying a new for multiple schlerosis at St. Joseph's hospital in Tacoma, and is very encouraged with the results. . . . Norma Diamond and Bruce MacArthur were married in Detroit at 5056 Coplin. last Feb. 14 and are in Tacoma, Wash., three months living ft NECROLOGY 6=b CHARLES ELIOT CALKINS, *99, Clayton township farmer and resident of Flushing, Mich., for more than 30 years, died Oct. 30, in Flint. He is survived by his wife, a daughter, two sons, one of whom is Odhasa E. Calkins, w'30, and a brother, Edmund A. Calkins, '98. '12, and two sons. LOYAL KELLOG FLOWER, '19, veterinarian of Delton, Mich., since 1937, died in a Newberry, Mich., hospital, Nov. 16. Dr. Flower was at his hunting lodge near that community when he was stricken with a heart attack. in Owosso, Sept. 20. Mrs. Calkins ARIZONA WIMPLE CALKINS, w'07, wife of Dr. Fred P. Calkins, retired state veterinarian, died taught home economics in Dearborn and Tacoma, Wash, where she also served -as city market inspector, and state bakery In Lansing where they made their home from 1930 to 1948 she was active in the D.A.R., Kappa Kappa Gamma soror ity, College Women's Volunteer Service, and St. Anne's guild. a daughter, Mary Calkins VanKeuren, '42, and two sons, John N., '37, and Charles F., '46. are her husband, Surviving inspector. '07, HAROLD BERTRAM WEEKS, insurance dealer in Albion, Mich., for more than 30 years, there Aug. 3. Mr. Weeks had served as died justice of in Albion since 1929. He recently attained life membership in the Masonic order after 40 years of affiliation with the local lodge. the peace EDWARD J. McGRAW, w ' l l, sales engineer for the past four years for Flack-Pennell Co., Inc., died in Saginaw Sept. 4. Mr. McGraw was sales representative for U. S. Rubber Company for nearly 30 years, and was regarded an expert in the field of factory conveyor belts and their installation. CURTIS L. COFFEEN, *12, former superin tendent of Tuscola County school and pioneer agricultural agent in Flint, Oct. 2. He is survived by his wife. Vera, in Lenawee County, died since graduation, died CARL MERWIN BROWN, '22, a Michigan Bell in Telephone employee Grand Rapids, Sept. 30. Plant chief for the com pany in Jackson, supervisor of installations and mainte nance in Grand Rapids, he was named field engi neer in the Grand Rapids office in 1941. in Northville, Mich., district inspector '26, instructor EVA MURIEL VAUGHAN, in English at MSC for 14 years, died in Battle Creek, Nov. 16. Before joining the college faculty Miss Vaughan had in a number of high schools throughout the state. At the living with a sister, Mrs. Harry Hall, in Battle Creek. time of her death she was taught English classes JACK HARDING WOLFRAM, w'44, World War II veteran and member of the Society of Auto motive Engineers, died Nov. 30. He is survived by his wife, the former Bonnie Redmond, '43, a daughter Jill Rae, and his parents. ROBERT BROWNELL CHAPIN, '47, who had received his Ph.D. in food technology from Iowa State in June, was killed Sept. 5 in an auto mobile accident near Kankakee, 111. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Chapin, of 504 Taylor Ave., Glen Ellyn, 111., survive. JOHN GROVE BLANCHARD, '47, sales engi neer for the American Blower Corp., and a World War II veteran, died in Detroit, July 7. He is survived by his wife, the former Mary Ritenour, w'45, and two sons. J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 17 . . . the reports trials and ' OQ On Hardware, Inc., letterhead, Bob Brnce *" writes from 1903 Tyler St., Hollywood, Fla.: "I purchased this business last February and tribulations of am enjoying all present day small business operation." He con tinues : "Congratulations on the Spartan's grand football season. All of us Florida 'cracker' alumni were thrilled to hear the results of each game and the sports writers' accounts." . Robert and Jean (Nicholie, w'40) Castell are living at 87 E. Iroquois Rd., Pontiac, where he is vice president of Nicholie & Harger, real estate and insurance. . . Katherine Foster Barnfield and Frederick Kellerhols were married Sept. 20, and are living in Indianapolis at 3344 N. Capitol Ave. . . . Sally Langdon Brown gives her new address as 2008 Longfellow, Detroit, and that she has intermittently at Merrill-Palmer School, worked and last term direct group ed program. Her hus band, Andrew, directs the community serv ices of department the UAW-CIO. They have children, Cameron Langdon, 6, and Heather Lang don, nearly 2. Their proud grandfather is C. S. Langdon, '11, of Hubbardston, Mich. . J. Robert Mc- Comb, Dow's agricul tural chemicals sales representative for the past three years, has been transferred to become a the Midland office member of the new agricultural chemicals sales promotion group, aiding in the field development of new products. McComb the play two to .. . #QQ Willis and Marjorie *J** Bash have purchased (Courchaine, w'40) the Green Acres Tourist Lodge on U.S. 27 out of Lansing. . . . Barbara Ann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harlan first W. Collar of Pitman, N. J., celebrated her birthday on Sept. 25. He is a supervisor in the engineering department of Aviation-Navigation at RCA, Camden, N. J. . Lt. Col. Lowell R. . Eklund may be reached at the Office Chief of Staff, Hdqs. U. S. Army Pacific, APO 958, San Fran cisco. . . . Major and Mrs. Clarence C. Feightner announce the birth of Rhonda Jeanne Oct. 19. They are living at 4024 Springlake Dr., Oklahoma City, Okla., where he is industrial hygiene engi neer at Tinker Air Force Base. . . . "By Christmas we will be in our new home at 3206 W. Nelson, Midland, Mich.," write Jack and Elsie (Witt, '40) Gibbs. . . . Lois Land Albrecht (Mrs. L. E.) writes from 1523 Tolma Ave., Pittsburgh, P a .: "We've covered every other state in the Union, including Hawaii, courtesy of Navy, etc., so why not the city of steel. I have two cute 'spring-offs', Linden, Jr., and Gretchen, who sing in the choir, 'emote' in ballet, and labor in 'Cubs and Brownies'." in northern Robert Dietsche, salesman lives at Illinois for Wright Chemical, 1309 Cedar Lane, Deerfield. . . . Lt. Col. John E. Harris is with the 3rd Bn. 65th Inf., 3rd Div., APO 468, San Francisco. . Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. H im (Doris Hooker) of Berrien Springs, Mich., announce the birth of their sixth daughter, Deborah Ruth, Oct. 21. . . . Dr. John Weed McCrea practices surgery and medicine in Marlette, Mich., where he and Mrs. McCrea and their three children make their home. . . . Going to St. Petersburg, Fla. ? Stop at the Waves Motel, 13343 Gulf Bldg., Highway 699, managed by Shir- 'Aft *^» . . Kuuttila Killed, Wounded Frimodig in Korean War A Michigan State College alumnus was killed and another seriously wounded while fighting with United Nations forces in Korea. Dead is Lieut. Harold O. Kuuttila, '50, Kaleva, Mich. Lieut. Kuuttila was killed by enemy machine gun fire as he evacu tank. He graduated ated his burning from MSC in business administration and entered the army with an ROTC com mission shortly after graduating in June, 1950. He is survived by his wife, Avis Herbert Kuuttila, formerly of East Lan sing. the This brings MSC Total Rises to Seven total of to seven Michigan State alumni reported killed or missing in action in the Korean War. '50, was seriously wounded in the neck in Korea about Oct. 26, according to a letter re ceived from him by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Frimodig, Lansing. Lieut. Mark M. Frimodig, Lieut. Frimodig graduated from MSC in June, 1950, with an ROTC commis sion. He had been on the front lines two months when he was wounded. generation of Collingwoods to attend. 'A.A. Herman Birnbaum, of Nuodex Products ^* •* Co., Inc., and his wife and son, Arthur, are living at 507 Fernwood Terrace, Linden, N. J. . . . Helen Fotheringham is dress buyer at Ahrens and Field, Inc., of New York City, where she lives at 405 E. 52nd St. . . . Capt. Keith Harsh is sta tioned at Fort Benning, Ga., with the 508 ARCT. . . . John Lawler was born Sept. 4 to Mr. and Mrs. John Hickey of 484 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. . . . Dorothy Hughes heads the language department of the Charlotte (Mich.| high school. . . . William and Evelyn (Crawford, '44) Kennedy and their two children are living at 104 E. Wood St., Yale, Mich., where he teaches in the high school. . . . Mr. and Mrs. John H. Pulker (Inez MacAdamsi of 422 W. McClellan St., Flint, an nounce the birth of Ruth Inez, Sept. 10. ^^ ' ^C Capt. Edward D. Atwood is stationed at Tokyo Gen. Disp. 8060 AU, APO 1052, San Francisco, and Mrs. Atwood (Alice Jeanne '461 may be reached at East Jordan, Nesman, Mich. . . . Sheila Ann was born Sept. 9 to Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Salvador (Yvonne Hale) of R. 3, Vienna, Va. . . . Gordon Hueschen heads the patent law department of the Upjohn Company in Kala mazoo, Mich., where he lives at 2021 Bronson Blvd., Apt. 3. . . . Loren and Phyllis Brunsvold Nus are living at 149 33rd St., N.E., Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he is associated with Station KCRG. . . . Mary Phillips Ragland gives her address as Lake Huron Methodist Camp, Jeddo, Mich., and notes: "My husband, Jim, this camp about 14 miles north of Port Huron. With our daughter Susan we are trying our first winter of summers here." camping—we've is manager of experienced five 'ACt Mr. an<^ Mrs. Robert A. Howland (June "•** Allen) of 321 Liston, Kenmore, N. Y., announce the birth of a second daughter, Rebecca Ann, July 21. . . . Charles Anthony is program director for the Bay Broadcasting Co. of Bay City, Mich., where he lives at 261 Lagoon Beech Dr. . . . Norma Lou Gregg, who in Italy, expects to return home in the spring. She is living in Rome at Via Sistina 125. . . . Bar is studying voice 18 . . . . T HE R E C O RD Glenn and Elna bara Ellen was born May 25 to Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Smith (Eleanor Treat) of 1040 Cedar St., Port Huron, Mich. . . . William Kuether, who received his M.S. with the class is associated with Minneapolis-Honeywell in Minneapolis, Minn., where he and Mrs. Kuether (Dorothy Tyrrell) live at 4542 Cedar St. . . . Doris Rinehart Reeves and her husband, William J., and their three children are living in Belleville, N. J., at 97 Overlook Ave. '421 Rushman are I Murphy. living at 1610 Woodmere Place, Bay City, where he is assistant field superintendent for Austin Con struction Company of Midland. . . . Markine Tray- nor is physical therapist at Gillette Hospital for Crippled Children in Minneapolis. Minn. . . . John Peter was born Nov. 16 to Mr. and Mrs. Leo P. "Bill" Wren, of 225 E. 79th St., New York City. . . . Roberta Watters has been accepted for mis sionary service with Latin American Mission, Inc., and plans to go to mission headquarters in San Jose, Costa Rica, the Spanish language before being assigned her perma nent station. study of intensive for ' A I7 Hazel J. Ashe and Wilmont J. Murray ' *' were married Nov. 22 and are making their home at 68 Lothrop St., Beverly, Mass. Mrs. Murray is director of Christian education in the First Baptist Church in Beverly and he is student minister in North Reading while completing his studies at Andover Newton Theological school. . . . Thomas H. Baird and Patricia Louise Tully were married April 14 and have been making their home in Racine, Wis., where he is with the Johnson Wax Co. He is now on military leave, serving as radar navigator at Mather AFB, Calif. . . . Lucile Bunn is in her third year of teaching at China Lake, Calif. . . . Lois Dingeldey and Garth Owen were married May 26 and are living at 902 S. Cuyler Ave., Oak Park, 111. . . . Erwin the Sears, is assistant manager of H. Erickson Roebuck store in Dubuque, Iowa, where he and Mrs. Erickson and live at 568\-> Loras Blvd. . . . Steven Whiteley was born Oct. 4 to Don and Patricia (Darr, '46) Getz. two children their the the current Department of Roy Hollowell and Ruth Eathorne were married June 2 and are living at 14902 Turner, Detroit, where he is with Shell Oil Co. . . . James Howell and Julius Martinek, '49, were the only two men the U. S. National Park Service chosen to from attend Interior training program held in Washing management is with the Shenandoah ton, D. C. The former National Park in Virginia while Mr. Martinek is at Mt. Ranier National Park in Washington. . . . Richard Huckins, of 20474 MacArthur St., Detroit, is assistant production manager of the Borden Co., Michigan Ice Cream division. . . . Keith Hunt has left the chemical engineering business to become business manager of Inter-Varsity Christian Fel lowship in Chicago. He and Mrs. Hunt (Gladys Schriemer, '48) and their son Mark are living in Wheaton, 111., 811 N. Scott. . . . Lt. Norman G. Kohl is with Hdqs. Co., 8th Cav. Rest., APO 201, San Francisco. Mrs. Kohl, the former Jean Proc living at 20140 tor, and their two children are Votrobeck Court, Apt. 103, Detroit. . . . Thomas G. McGurrin, Jr., who received his law degree from the University of Detroit, is now associated with the law firm of Foster, Cummins, Snyder, Cameron and Foster in Lansing. Walter and Ann Frances Hard Mischley are living at 1347 Hains, Richland, Wash., where he facility is chief of municipal and commercial branch of the Atomic Energy Commission. . . . Russell Morgan has been transferred by Maxon Construction Co., Inc., to the home office in Day ton, Ohio, where he lives at 1921 Grand Ave. . . . Harold and Doris '441 Neumann are (Johnson, living at 2364 Yost Blvd., Pittsfield Park, Ann Arbor, where he is representative for the College Life Insurance Company of America. . Lt. Edwin J. Pilchard, Jr., is base veterinarian at Warner Robins, Ga. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Fair (Natalie Pope) and their two children, Terri and Samuel III are living at "Fairacres" on the . . . Burt Kawkawlin river and Peggy living at 19164 Votrobeck Dr., Detroit, where he is with is ad Lincoln-Mercury. in Bay City, Mich. '461 Schimpke are . Lenore Schroeder (Fox, . . . . ministrative assistant to the director of research at Parke-Davis labs in Detroit, and lives at 2530 Second Blvd. Grace Sellers, who received her M.M. with the class, is associate professor of piano, theory, and organ at Southwestern College, Winfield, Kansas. . . . Gale D. Sharpe is connected with the Min nesota Mining and Manufacturing Co. in Detroit, as applied research engineer in the adhesive and coating division. He and Mrs. Sharpe (the former Corinne Riesing, '44) and their two sons, live in Detroit at 12742 Abington Rd. . . . Wilbur and Dorothy '45) Vincent are living on Upper Mountain Rd., Lewiston, N. Y., while he is electronics engineer at Bell Aircraft in Buffalo. . . . Kenneth Waldron is located in Newport, Ore., as biologist for the Oregon Fish Commission. . . . Jesse Woodring, who received his M.A. at State, last June, is employed by the state of Kansas as rehabilitation consultant for the handicapped adult blind. He is located in Wichita at 1441/.' N. Mar ket St. (Underwood . . . is ' AQ located at in Hempstead, N. Y. Jack Bedell has been U Greenfield-Mills Restaurant Company . transferred by to its office at 315 Euclid Ave., Cleveland. . Gertrude Bosscher is therapeutic teaching dietitian at Rochester General hospital, Rochester, N. Y. . . . Arthur Briskin is a professor on the staff at Hofstra College . the Roscoe B. Chen Kang Chai Jackson Memorial Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. . . . Gail Ann was born Sept. 21 to Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. are Chapman, who living in Orlando, Fla., where he is en tomologist with the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. . Dr. Beerappa . Chandrashaker, who received his M.S. with the his Ph.D. in 1951, has re turned to India where he is associated with the Department of Animal Husbandry in . Mysore City. Edward T. Coon is agricultural chemicals sales representative in Michigan for Dow Chemical. . . . Timothy Champ was born Nov. 18 to Mr. and Mrs. Em Ghianni of 60 Bloomfield Terraces, Pon- tiac. His proud education director and coach of all sports at Washington Junior high school. Chandrashaker is physical father class and . . . Laura Lee Jensen is dietitian at Rhode Island Hospital in Providence. . . . Mary Haviland and Allen Parker were married June 2 and are making in Morley, Mich., where both are their home teaching. in . . care of Officers Mail Room, Box 50, APO 334, San . Willard Munro passed his bar Francisco. . Doris Koski may be reached . . Letters To The Editor Starting with the March 1 edition, THE RECORD will carry a new feature—"Letters to the Editor." The editors would like to carry, within space limitations, some of the ideas of alumni, pro and con, rela tive to Michigan State College, its policies and plans; the MSC Alumni organization and the alumni maga zine. The editors reserve the right to edit letters, so be brief. That's how what you want to say gets into print it. Send like you say letters to: The Editor, MSC Record, Department of Information Services. just instructor from St. Vincent hospital examinations last spring and has opened his law office at 1735 Dime Bldg., Detroit. He and Mrs. Munro (Marion Somerville) are living in Royal Oak at 125 E. Ten Mile Rd. . . . Joyce Petersen writes in Billings, Mont.: "While visiting patients on my morning dietary rounds, I entered the room of Mrs. James Kilbourne who had recently become the mother of triplets, two boys and a girl. Now being the mother of triplets is in itself a small wonder, but to discover that Mrs. Kilbourne was none other than the former Zoe McCormick, in foods and nutrition at State during my two years there, was truly amazing. Just another incident to prove that it's a small world after all." Charles and Char (Mulder, w'47) lotte Rescorla their two children are liv ing at 124 Augusta Court, Park Village, York, Pa., where he is sales engineer with York Air Condition- ing and Refrigeration Corp. . . . Earl Rob ertson research is for S. C. chemist Johnson & Son, Inc., Racine, Wis., in where he and Mrs. Robertson and their three boys live at 2008 Taylor Ave. . . . Second Lieut. John B. Sleeman received the silver wings of a jet fighter pilot Oct. 27 at Williams Air Force Base, Arizona. . . . Jack and Marilyn Miller Worth, of 815 Amherst, South Bend, Ind., announce the birth of Christine Louise, Oct. 15. t Sleeman and X them what ' AQ Carlos Aulenbacher gives his address as ^*» Proveedora Agricola, SRL, Apartado Postal 200, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico, and notes: "I do a lot of managerial work for the company and also go out to the farmers and tell their soil and is wrong with what bug is chewing up their crops." . . . Lt. and Mrs. Arthur Kortesoja (Grace Bagnall) an nounce the birth of Alan Arthur, Oct. 8 at the Station Hospital, Fort Riley, Kans. . . . Lt. Wil liam F. Beardsley is stationed at Fort Sill, Okla., with the 31st Criminal Investigation Det. . . Charles and Norma Lou Reedy Berry announce the birth of their daughter, Cynthia Lynn, Sept. 1. The Berrys are living at 29 Kirtland, S.W., Grand Rapids, where he has opened his own auto supply store in the Burton Heights section. . . . Stewart A. Brown, who received his M.S. with the class and his Ph.D. in 1951, is chemist for the National Research Council in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. . "I cover the waterfront, so to speak," writes Robert S. Burns, assistant to the marine news editor of the New York Herald Tribune. Bob lives in New York at 88 W. 197th St. . . . Paige W. Christiansen and Dorothy Sherwood, M.A. '50, of 1071/!. First Ave., S.W., Watertown, S. D., cele brated their first wedding anniversary in Decem ber. . . . Robert and Joyce (Conklin, '48) Clark live at 1206 Harrison St., Syracuse, N. Y., where he is electronic engineer with General Electric. . . . Byron and Jacquelyn Smith Converse and their almost a year-old daughter Sheryl Ann are living at 1223 Lawndale, Royal Oak, where he is assistant buyer with Lee and Cady. . . . Dr. and Mrs. Earl H. Devereaux, of Merrill, Mich., announce the birth of their second son. David Earl, June 12. . . . Patricia Finch, who joined the touring show of "South Pacific" about two years ago, is now playing in the New York com pany on Broadway. . . Bruce Greve is doing graduate work in Petroleum geology at Colorado School of Mines at Golden . . . James Henning and Carolyn Robbins, '51, were married Oct. 20 and are living at 23101 Edsel Ford Dr., St. Clair Shores. . . . Lt. Richard A. Hiscox was recalled to active duty a year ago and is stationed at Army Chemical Center, Edgewood, Md., where his wife and two children have joined him. . . . Ross and Shirley (Caswell, '46) Hulet of 66 Washington, Pontiac, announce the birth of Marc Lee, Sept. . . . . John and Barbara 12. (Burridge, w"50) Hutchinson have a new home at 37 Ridgemar Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Florence Jackson is located in Detroit as medi cal technologist at Yates Memorial Cancer Clinic. . . Raymond Johnson is assistant office manager for the American Seating Co. in Syracuse, N. Y., where he lives at 115 Linwill Terrace, Apt. 93. . . William and Aria (Parsons, '48) Jones are living at 35 Carlson Parkway, Cedar Grove, N. J., is commercial engineer for Westing- where he house in Bloomfield. . . . Geraldine King is ad ministrative assistant for the Detroit Lions Foot ball company, 1401 Michigan, Detroit. . . . Law rence King is research chemist for International in Chicago and he and Mrs. King Harvester (Beulah Hooper, live at Parkview Trailer Court, R. 2, Joliet. . . . Robert and Carol Bennett Morse, of 161 Jean St., S.W., Grand Rapids, announce the birth of their second son, Stephen Robert, Oct. 18. . . . Richard Nametz is organic chemist at the B. F. Goodrich Research Center, Breckville, Ohio. '47) Mary E. Pate and David P. Keiser (Marquette, '46) were married June 30, the 30th anniversary of the marriage of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Pate, '17. The Reisers are living in Detroit at 12650 Wyoming. . . . Lois J. Patterson, of 13986 Forrer Ave., Detroit, is technician in the laboratory of the student health service, University of Michigan. . . . Rudy and Yvonne (Jones, '46) Pessel of 658 Wolverine Dr., N.E., Grand Rapids, announce the birth of their second child, Lois Jean, Sept. 3. He is continuity director for radio and television at Station WOOD. . . . Glenn and Gloria (Adams, '48) Peterson are living at 5911 West Lake St., Chicago, where he is in the export divi sion of Oliver Corp. and she teaches in Oak Park. . . . Felix A. Racette, of Paw Paw, Mich., was re cently named state editor of the Kalamazoo Ga is working for his zette. Ph.D. in soil chemistry at the University of Wis consin, and lives in Madison at 25 S. Mills St. . . . William and Dorothy (Gustafson, '48) San derson, of 1214 Anderson Rd., Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, announce the birth of Patricia Kay, Aug. in 13. . . . Harold Schick, former city forester Pontiac, is superintendent of parks in LaCrosse, Wis., where he and Mrs. Schick (Jo Ann Cline, w'44) live at 1123 Division. . Luis A. Romo . . . is serving with Robert H. Schroeder . Lt. Donald Schuler is methods engineer at Detroit Diesel Engine division, and with his wife and daughter, lives at 20053 Woodworth, Detroit. . the armed forces in Bordeaux, France, where Mrs. Schuler (Jean Smith) and their daughter expect to join him early in 1952. . . . Richard Simmons is copy writer for Ross Roy, Inc., in Detroit, where he lives at 19759 Greydale Ave. . . . Wil liam D. Staples received his M.S. in electrical engineering from California Institute of Tech nology in June and is now employed by National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D. C. . . . Jeanne Tanner teaches physical education in the Berkley (Mich.) high school and lives in Grosse Pointe at 1416 Nottingham. . . . "We are proud to announce that Robert Christian arrived March 20," writes Robert C. Toll from Kansas City Club 1128 Baltimore, Kansas City, Mo. . . . Jean Marie Tyson and Virgil L. DuVal were married July 21 and are living at 2419 Haste, Apt. 4, Berkeley, Calif. . . . Joanne Lynn was born March 23 to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vanderscors of Salladasburg, Pa. . . . William V. Warren is with the U. S. Public Health Service working on a Columbia River project out of Hanford, Wash. He may be reached at 1808 W. Margaret, Pasco, Wash. . . . Fred and Mary (Mellencamp, '50) Welling of 215 Marion, Big Rapids, Mich., announce the birth of Kay Louise, July 7. . . is regional representative Robert and Edith (Anderson, '47) Wordens and their son are living at 501 N. Roosevelt, Columbus, Ohio, where Bob for is with U. S. . Robert Wright Pepsi Cola. Steel at the Gary Sheet and Tin Mill, and lives on R. 2, Chesterton, Ind. . . . Byron Wyatt and Arciel Roy, '51, were married July 7 and are living at 3510 Erdman Ave., Baltimore, Md. . . . '46) Zimmerman B. Maynard and Jo (Johnson, Spartans Discuss Flight Mission SPARTANS AT WAR: Second Lieut. Fred Schenck, '51, left, and First Lieut. Charles Doane, '48, Korean veteran, discuss the mission which Doane has just completed in a F-51 Mustang fighter. Both men are assigned to the 122nd Fighter-Inter- cepter Wing, Baer field, Ft. Wayne, Ind., along with six other Spartan alumni. Schenck is attached to wing headquarters information public office. Doane returned recently after flying 106 missions in Korea totaling more than 350 combat hours. He was flying unarmed T-6 trainer-type planes for low altitude reconnais sance. give their new address as 4518 Olivia, Royal Oak, Mich., and report: "Our new street is lined with State grads; it's just like old home week. We have a son, Bradley Maynard III, born December 25, 1950." ^ *J ' CH Charles and Mary (Riddering, '471 Bey- ette are living at 149 Scott Lake Rd., Pontiac, Mich., where he teaches vocational guid ance and history in Eastern Junior high school. . . . Roger Bowlby is on the economics staff at the University of Texas, Austin. . . . Betty Ann Bush is assistant dietitian at Wyandotte (Mich.) General Hospital. . . . Lt. William G. demons may be reached at Hdqs. FEAF, APO 925. San Francisco. . . . Dr. George L. Crenshaw has estab lished his veterinary office in Orland, Calif. . . . Annie-Laurie deVries Robinson (Mrsj Richard L.) teaches second grade at Verlinden Avenue school in Lansing where she lives at 14161;.. Jerome St. . . . Grant Estep, who works for Reynolds Metals in McCook, 111., lives at 8th Ave. and Plainfield Rd., in LaGrange. . . . Donald Gamelin is an an nouncer at Station WSWN, Belle Glade, Fla. . . . Dr. Pitchaimuthu Govindan, who received his Ph.D. with the class, is associate professor of zoology at Annamalai University, Annamalaina- gar, South India. William Grabb and A. Cozette Tweedie, '49, were married Aug. 25 and are living at 418 N. in his third Division, Ann Arbor, where he is year at medical school. is . a graduate student at the University of Chicago and lives in International House, 1414 S. 59th St. . Sania Hamady . J A N U A RY 1 5, 1 9 52 . . .. 19 . . . Daniel and Anne Marie I Aranuk, '481 Hester are living at 16532 Rosemary St., Fraser, Mich., where he is campaign director for United Founda tion in Center Line. . . . Mr. and Mrs. William N. Morse I Marie Higbie) of 97 E. Burnham, Battle the birth of Charles Higbie, Creek, announce July 12. Stanley Hrovatin and Lorene Hyslop, '51, were married Oct. 6 and are living at 315 S. Central Park Blvd., Chicago, where he is chief . . . Richard commissary at the Palmer House. Johnson is physical therapist at Children's Hos pital, San Francisco. . . . Robert Kehn is assistant manager of Hotel Penn Albert, Greensburg, Pa. . . . Tom LaBelle, editor for a year of the Grand- ville Star and (Grand Rapids) the Southwest Alliance, is now a reporter for the Times-Herald of Port Huron, Mich., where he lives at 1115 Lapeer St. Jack and Peggy (Green w'45) Livingstone and their four daughters are farming near Manches ter, Mich., R. 3. . . . Bill Lloyd and Gretchen Wright were married Aug. 4, and are living at 902 S. Highland, Oak Park, 111. He is in his junior year at Northwestern Medical school while she teaches speech correction in Cicero. . . . Bob McKeen is a 2nd Lt. with the 29th AAA AW Bn., D Bty., APO 919, San Francisco. . . . John K. Mason writes from Box 3102, Tyler, Texas: "I have recently purchased Tyler Nash Co. Bruce Whitney . . . Under date of Oct. 7, "Salty" O'Rourke wrote that he expected to be married Dec. 1 to Mary J a ne O'Meara (U. of Houston, '51). Lt. O'Rourke is stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., with . . . J. K. Co. C. 68th MT Bn, CCB, 6th Ad. the class, Punwar, who received his M.S. with is continuing his graduate studies at the Uni versity of Wisconsin, Madison. is acting as my sales manager." the USAF Sgt. David Richards is in Korea with Hdq. 2nd Bn, 35th RCT, APO 25, San Francisco. . . . Lt. Maynard Richmond is enrolled at Pennsylvania State College in an intensive meteorological cur riculum under auspices of Institute of Technology, Wright-Paterson AFB. Dayton, Ohio. . . . Horace A. Smith, Jr., is geologist with Pan-American Production Co., Houston, Tex. . . . William and Betty Lou {Richmond, '511 Terry are living at 2066 Johnson Ferry Rd., Chamblee, Ga., where he has been transferred as field representa for American Aberdeen-Angus Breeders' tive Assoc. . . . Thomas and Dorothy '48) Winnard and two daughters are living at their 1504 Wales Court, Willow Run, Mich., where he is in the purchasing department of Kaiser-Frazer. . . . Ann Zierleyn is director of students at New Jersey College for Women, New Brunswick. i Milliken, First Lieut. Richard Munkachy has been to active duty and has been serving since May, re in called 1951. His wife, Marilyn Korea (Nystrom) Munkachy, is working in the depart ment of Information Services at Michigan State. ' CI * ** Louis Baldoni and Clyde Davenport are in medical school, Baldoni at enrolled the University of Michigan, Davenport at Wayne University while Roger Tusken is a law student at Northwestern. . . . Veterinarians putting their training into practice • include Drs. Allen E. Dunckel at Northeast Veterinary hospital in De troit ; Vern Patterson at Dearborn Veterinary hos pital in Dearborn, Mich. ; Jeremy Ferries in Mon roe, Wis. ; Henning Haugard in Rockford, Mich. : C. J. Laridaen in Mauston, Wis. ; and Carl Olsen in Phillips, Wis. Among those of the class who are in the armed services a r e: Robert Bailey, Melville Barlow, Leo Baumgartner, John Bones, Steve Bransdorfer, Thomas Branson, Thomas Broe, Ronald Burns, Donald Burton, James Caird, Thomas Chaffee, Donald Craig, Louis Deinzer, Frederick Eber- hardt, Robert Grant, Charles Grill, Harold Guern sey, Robert Hall, John Hardy, George Hubbard, Robert Irwin, Eugene Johnson, Joseph King, Don ald McGregor, George Manuel, David Matherly, John Metz, Harold Miller, Robert Miller, Ken Palmer, Edward Penabaker, Alan Selby, James Shoffner, Wallace Wheeler, Donald Whittemore, and Rexford Willnow. in teaches John E. Foley the West Haven (Conn.) high school, while in various Michigan communities a r e: John Alexander, Albion: Jose phine Hoppa Artlip, Muskegon Heights; Marita Bull, Ann Arbor; Lois Fisher, Grosse Pointe Woods Stanley Gamble, Pentwater; Donald Hill- man, Ubly ; Carolyn Kautz Ballard, Grand Ledge ; Joyce Kuhn, East Grand Rapids; Albert McCort, Jackson ; John Parr, Romeo; Sally Reid, Bir mingham ; Betty Sigan, Trenary; James Suther land, Caro ; Victor Toivonen, F l i n t; Raelene War ren Lyons, Lansing; and Margaret Wiant, Meno minee. . in Chicago. the Stevens Hotel Aaron Applegate is assistant county supervisor for Farmers Home Administration, 205 Peters is Circle, Charlotte, Mich. - . . Raymond Baker steward at . . Catherine Abrams is also in Chicago, food super visor at Marshall Fields. . . . Vurnal Bartlett is partner in the Suburban Tree Science and Service, . . . Daniel Black is 22075 Hayes, East Detroit. placement assistant at Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D. C, where he lives at 13 Riggs Rd., N.E. the grocery business in Carson City, Mich. . . . John Buth is dairyman at Creston Farms, Comstock Park, Mich. . . . Richard Clark is assistant engineer for Commonwealth Associates, Inc., 119 E. Washing ton, Jackson, Mich. junior . in Seattle, Wash., engineer at Boeing Aircraft where he lives at 4312 4th ave., N.E Alvin and Ann Rood Croft are living at 314 S. Michi gan, Vicksburg, Mich. He is employed at Souther- land Paper Co. in Kalamazoo while she teaches home economics in the Vicksburg high school. . . . . John Brooks . John Clay is in . . is . THE RECORD Published seven times a year by the Department of Informa tion Services of Michigan State College, East Lansing, Mich. Return Postage Guaranteed NOTICE TO POSTMASTER is undelivered at your an "X" non-delivery. in the post square this magazine If office, p l e a se place indicating reason for a a a a a Refused D e c e a s ed Unclaimed Address Unknown Removed to . Marvin Drake is accountant for Frank Chevrolet Sales at Otsego, Mich. . . Edward Fellows has an engineering job with Eclipse-Pioneer Division of Bendix, and he and Mrs. Fellows (Emily Larson, '49) live at 15 Don ald St., Apt. B, Bloomfield, N. J. . Garold Grossnickle is farm design engineer for the Oliver Corp. in South Bend, Ind. . . . Vincent Hayes, sales representative for Wyeth, Inc., lives at 486 Pilgrim Rd., Birmingham, Mich. . . . David Hoff mann and Delores Weinberg were married July 14 and are living at 533 Vi Main St., Honolulu, where he is designing engineer at Pearl Harbor Navy Yard. . . . Dr. James Hughson is interning at Angell Memorial Animal Hospital in Boston, and he and Mrs. Hughson (Lucy Payne, '42) make their home at 1298 Commonwealth, Allston, Mass. . . . Richard and Marylin (Miller '50) Jeffreys are living at 2742 W. 6th Ave., Gary, Ind., where he is junior metallurgist for United States Steel. . . . Wilfred Kehren, of 31440 Mound Rd., Warren, Mich., assists the color selector for upholstery of all General Motors automobiles. . . . Robert Kil- lackey in Grand Rapids, Mich., as public relations director of the Chamber of Com merce. located is Robert Koller and is assistant director of public for Union County refectories information Park Commission, Elizabeth, N. J. . . . Evelyn LaVine is a buyer trainee at J. L. Hudson's in Detroit where she lives at 2530 Second Blvd. . . . Burton Manth is production manager for Abrams Instrument Corp. in Lansing, where he lives at (Rahm, 2042 Mary Ave. . . . Theodore and Joan '48 ( Modi announce the birth of Christine Ann, Sept. 4. They are living at 1011 13th St., Niagara Falls, N. Y., where he . Casmier Montemurri, job analyist for Ford Motor Co., lives in Detroit at 8139 Sussex. . . . William Murray is naturalist for Forest Preserve District of Cook County, and lives in Chicago at 10201 S. Aberdeen. is with duPont. . . William Peterman and Barbara Jeschke, w'52, were married Oct. 13, and are living in Fleming- ton, N. J., at 37 Church St. . . . John Poloncak lives at 1004 W. Franklin, Richmond, Va., and is salesman for Philip Morris. . . . William and Joan (Combs, '49) Rudman are living at 22 Lex ington Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y., where he is test engineer for International Business Machines. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Samuelson announce twin daughters, Barbara Ann and the birth of in Remus, living Betty Lou, July 8. They are Mich., where he teaches vocational agriculture. . . . Ralph C. Smith and Margaret Davis were married Sept. 21 and are living at 15208 Arden, Plymouth, Mich. . . . Charles Thorne and Mary Purdy, *49, were married June 30 and are living at 180 Emery, Benton Harbor, Mich. He is an engineer at Whirlpool Corp., and teaches physical education she in the public schools. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at East Lansing, Michigan. 2s ,