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Published by thekeep, 2020-10-27 11:15:50

Eastern Alumnus Vol. 7 No. 2 (September 1953)

Eastern Illinois State College alumni newsletter magazine

Keywords: Eastern Illinois University,EIU,alumni news

ptember

1953

The Eastern Alumnus

Published in June, September, December and March by Eastern lllinoil
State. College, Charleston, Illinois

VOLUME 7 SEPTEMBER, 1953 NUMBER 2

Editorially Speaking Entered May 14, 1947, as second class matter, at the post office at

Perhaps no other teachers col- Charleston, Illinois, under authority of the act of Congress, August 24,
lege in America has been so for- 1912. Yearly subscription rate $1.50; two years $2.25; three years $3.0~
tunate as Eastern in the continuity Renewals, $ l'.00 per year.
of administrative policy as shaped
by its presidents. For 33 years the STAN ELAM ------------------------------------------- Edito~
school was guided by the benevo-
lent but iron hand of Livingston C. K. E. HESLER ·------------------------------------- Sports Editor
Lord. For 20 more it has been un-
der the direction of a very different Editorial Board
but no less strong administrator,
Robert G. Buzzard. Libby Cochran, '51; Hal Hubbard, '49; Hal Middlesworth, '31;
Elenore Moberley, '49; Louise McNutt, '35; Jack Muthersbough, '48; Dr.
As Glenn H. Seymour has often Francis Palmer; Eugene Price, '48; Jim Roberts, '46; Mrs. Russell Shrivel
pointed out in alumni club discus- '09; Elsie Sloan, '24; Helen Stapp, '23; Alex Summers, '36; Dr. E. H.
sions of the achievements of these Taylor; Roy Wilson, '36.
two men, both brought to Eastern
exactl¥ what was needed at the Napoleon is now an alumnus. In the cover picture, he is shown ius4
time that it was needed. before he received the Doctor of Pedadoggy this summer.

Mr. Lord was ideal for the early Despite his elevated status, Napoleon remains a campus favoritel
period of the school's development. In August he was the victim of a leg injury, complicated by betweenl
His standards were the highest of
those of the period he typified, terms malnutrition. Students lavished him with food and medical attentiotl
standards which emphasized char- this fall. The 'News' collected $18.03 in one day for doctor's fees (M. D.~
acter, scholarship, and personality, that is).
and which considered the extent of
professional training to be of sec- Eastern Adds Nineteen New
ondary importance. He brought na-
tional distinction to the Charleston Members to 1953-54 Staff
school in a day when normal
schools were struggling for aca- Nineteen new faculty members grounds staff. Another takes ov
demic respectability. Although his are on campus for the 1953-54
title was president of a teachers school year, according to President duties as college physician.
college, he was at heart the prin- Dr. Vernon L. Anderson replac
cipal of a normal schools to the day R. G. Buzzard. Twelve will teach
of his death.* Miss Ruth Carman, who retired at
on the college level, five in the the end of the spring quarter. Dr~
Upon his arrival in 1933, Dr. campus elementary or high schools, Anderson received the Ph. D. fro
Buzzard immediately threw his and one will take charge of the Stanford University this year. H~
youthful enthusiasm and energy
into the problems of expanding cover of this Alumnus shows and as will serve as assistant professor o
Eastern's physical plant, into reor- the 1953 North Central Association
ganization of the administrative report so eloquently testifies (see foreign languages. Dr. Anderson
plan (Mr. Lord felt more and more June, 1953, Alumnus).
the difficulty of dealing on a per- home was in Salt Lake City, Utah.
.sonal basis with all the members It is very fitting that the Home- Replacing Dr. Henry L. Ewban
of the school), and into the vexing coming program this year incorpor-
and thankless task of improving ates honors for both Mr. Lord and in speech is Dr. Ernest G. Borman
faculty training. Dr. Buzzard. The Old-Fashioned Dr. Bormann received the M. A. de·
Chapel, so characteristically Mr. gree in 1951 and the Ph. D. fro
In all of these he has succeeded Lord, and the parade. and house de-
admirably, as the map on the back corations theme, "These Twenty the State University of Iowa thi
Years," do just honor to Eastern's year. He will be assistant profe
two great presidents. sor of speech.

*Quoted from Dr. C. H. Cole- The vacancy left when Miss Va
man's Eastern Illinois State College. lou Patton resigned was filled by
Miss Edith Carc;li. Miss Cardi recei
ed the B. S. degree from the Sta
Teachers College of New Yor
Buffalo, in 1951 and the M. S. de4
gree from Indiana University thit

(Continued on next page)

PAGE TWO

(Cont nued from preceding page) principal. Dr. Edwards is now teach- promotion to head of the Placement
ing full time in the college educa- Bureau. Dr. Schrom received the Ed.
ear. She will be an instruc!or and tion department with special duties D. degree from the University of
in the recruitment of elementary Missouri this year.
~I e\JOr of Lincoln Hall. Miss Pat- teachers. Dr. Knox received the Ph.
D. degree from the University of Dr. P. Scott Smith substitutes in
~rr1 t1mtuemnietd Lynn Trank . o f the art Wisconsin this year. He is also an the physics deparment for Robert
in August. assistant professor of education. Waddell, Eastern '47, who is on
~bert Carey has taken the posi- leave for study. Dr. Smith received
Miss Renate M. Lenel of England the Ph. D. degree from Cornell
tion left by the resignation of Wil- is an exchange teacher, taking the University in 1951.
position formerly held by Miss
r1amA ~ealey. (See sports.) of physi- Charlotte Lambert in physical edu- Dr. Wayne L. Thurman has taken
iubstitute instructor cation. Miss Lambert has taken Miss the position in speech left by the
Lenel's position in a girls' school resignation of Dr. McKenzie Buck,
cal ~ucation for women replacing in Wares, Eng. who is heading. a new speech clinic
ai" the University of Florida. Dr.
Miss Porothy Hart (on leave for F. Raymond McKerina has re- Thurman received the Ph. D degree
placed Dr. T. A. Phillips as assistant from Purdue University this year.
study) is ~iss Marise Davis. Miss professor of education following He will be an assistant professor
Dr. Phillips' promotion to the East- and take cha.rge of the speech
Davis received the M. A. degree ern State High principalship. Mr. clinic.
McKenna received the M . Ed. de-
from New York University in 1946. gree from Harvard University in Dr. Donald F. Tingley, '47, takes
1951. the position left vacant by Dr. Al-
Her home was Cullam, Ala. bert Brown's transfer to the geog-
Miss Julia Denham has replaced Samuel E. Pisaro has replaced raphy departmnet. Dr. Tingley
John Stevens as assistant professor supervises social science in Eastern
Dr. Juana de Laban, who resigned and eighth grade supervisor. Mr. State High. He received the Ph. D.
to head a new dance department Pisaro received his M. S. degree degree from the University of Illi-
at lklahoma College for Women. from New York State Teachers Col- nois in 1952.
· Miss Denham received the A. _M. de- lege in 1951.
gree from Columbia University in Robert L. Gonderman has been
Dr. George W. Rommel takes a hired as instructor and landscape
1945. position in the English department architect. He received the M. S. de-
left by the retirement of Dr. How- gree from Oregon State College in
Miss Sarah E. Fredenberger, East- ard DeF. Widger. Dr. Rommel re- "1950.
ceived the Ph. D. degree from
ern '46, will substitute this year for Northwestern University this year. Dr. Lauro Ruben Montmayor re-
Miss Lorene Zeigler, sixth grade places Dr. Robert Rodin as staff
Dr. Ned S. Schrom has replaced physician. Dr. Montmayor received
!Upervisor who is on leave for Dr. William H. Zeigel as director the B. S. from the University of
study. Miss Fredenberger received of admissions following Dr. Zeigel's
(Continued on page 12)
the M. Ed. degree from George
9'abody College for Teachers this

year.
Cary Knoop, a graduate of Milli-

kin lniversity who took the M . F.
A. from the University of Illinois
this year, will substitute for Mrs.

¥irginia W. Hyett in elementary art.
Mrs. Hyett is on leave for study.

Dr. William B. Knox replaces Dr.

A. U. Edwards as elementary school

There's a Long, Long Trail

This Prairie ·state Field Study group, toured Canada and the Northeast U. S. in August. Twenty-three stu-
dents made the trip.

PAGE THREE

Eastern's 39th Homecorriing:

Old Words, New.Melody .Homecoming Slate in Briei
Friday, Oct. 16
This is the way "Old Aud" looked in the days of the 9 o'clock chapel,
made famous by Mr. Lord. The scene will be re-enacted Saturday, Oct. 17, 2:30-4 p.m.-Frcsh-Soph Contests
with Mr. Taylor in charge.
4-Tug-of-War across Lake
6:30-Pep Rally, Outdoor Theate~

8-"Love Rides the Rails," Healt•

Ed. Bldg. .

9-12-Howdy Hop, Old Aud.

11-Midnight Show, Will Rogers

Saturday, Oct. 17

9 a.m.-Old-Fashioned Chapel

After Chapel-Reunions, Classe~

ending in 3 and 8

10:30-Homecoming Parade

11 :30-1 :00-General Luncheon,

Cafeteria

2 p.m.-Eastern vs. Northeast

Missouri

After game-Organizational Meet.,

ings

7:30-8:30-Carlyle Concert, HealtH

Ed. Bldg.

9-12-Coronation and Dance

Sunday, Oct. 18

2:30 p.m.-Dedication and Nami

of Health Education Building fo

Dr. C. P. Lantz.

Gives Name to Gym

Here It Is, Just As You Knew It
More Than Twenty Years Ago

Here is the program for the "Old- Among faculty members who are

Fashioned Chapel" at Homecoming: expected to occupy their. old posi-

8:52-First bell. · tions on the stage during the pro-

8:55-Piano prelude, Dean Heller gram are Miss Ragan, Mr. Thomas,
for Mr. Koch. Miss Booth, Miss Weller, Mr. Lantz,
Mr. Stover, Mr. Davis, Mrs. Moore,
9:00-Second bell. Everyone is Mr. Seymour, Mr. Coleman, Mr.
seated. Phipps, Mr. Waffle, Miss Arnold,

Hymn, "Nicaea." E v e r Yo n e Miss Thompson, Mr. Scruggs, Mr.

stands. Thut, Mr. Cavins, Miss Reinhardt,

Lord's Prayer. Miss Michael, Mr. Guinagh, Mrs.

"The Gloria." Be seated at close. Blackford, Miss Carman, Mrs. Cav-

The Scripture Lesson, Mr. Taylor. ins, Mrs. Castle, Miss Levake, Mr.

"Crusader's Hymn." Audience Widger, Mrs. Thut, Miss Zeller, Miss

rises. - Harris, Miss Hendrix, Mr. Landis,

Announcements. Audience is Miss Love, Miss Hanson, Miss

seated. Thomas, Miss McAfee, Miss Marks,

Address of Welcome, Mr. Stover. Mrs. Taylor, and Mrs. Phipps.

Response, Mr. Funkhouser. Several former faculty from dis-

"Homing," Mr. Snyder. tant places are also expected, in-

Address, Mr. Taylor. eluding Carl Colvin of Washington

School Song, "For Us Arose Thy and possibly Thomas Briggs of New It will be "Lantz Gym" after 2.3C
p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18.
Walls and Towers." York.

PAGE FOUR

October 16 through 18

Russ Carlyle, whose orchestra
will play the Homecoming concert
at 7;30 to 8:30 and the coronation
dance from 9 to 12. Carlyle has
been rated the nation's fourth most
ai>ular vocalist by Billboard. The
lllllhestra has appeared at the Ara-
gon and Trianon ballrooms in Chi-
cago, in the Arcadia ballroom in
New York, and the Balinese Room
in 5alveston. Coral, Sharp, and
Capitol have made his recordings.

~omecoming theme, "These 20 These were the 1953 Homecoming Queen candidates. Miss Marilyn
Years," was adopted in honor of Harris, rear, won the election by a slim margin. Miss Harris, a Casey High
Dr. R. G. Buzzard, above, who be- graduate, is also student chairman for the Homecoming festivities . Others
came president of Eastern on Octo- are Mary Ellen Lee, Mattoon; Marilyn Roe (wife of Dwayne Roe, '53),
ber l, 1933. 'A convocation was Danville; and Pat Cannon, Potomac.
held in his honor. on Oct. 3, 500
l.iends attending. PAGE FIVE

Class of '03 to Hold G_olden Anniversary Reunion

The Golden Anniversary reunion of the Class of 1903 will be held this fall as part of the Homecomi
celebration. Of the above class group, 12 are still living, and of these some six or seven will meet for a
luncheon at the home of Class Secretary Ernest Freeman of Charleston. Top, I. to r.-Charles S. Stewart*, Zull
Persons, Mr. Freeman, Hattie Harrah*, Charles C. Gordon*, Mabel Wright*, Philip Dougherty*, Second fro
top-Alice Birdie McDonald, John Corwin Reeder*, Grace Ellison*, Arthur Lumbrick*, Myrtle Huston, Willia
E. Wade*, Gertrude Balter*. Third from top-Mary C. Ficklin*, Katherine Jenkins*, Elizabeth Doyle, Mary C
Shannon*, Sherman Littler, Bonnie Shoot, Charles Wallace. Bottom-William Harris, Martha Josephine Harkel

Eva Young, Roscoe Rarrar.
*Deceased. *Address unknown.

Ferree Family Wins test. There were several other llAC Representative
prizes.
State Fair Title Dr. James M. Thompson, bu
Besides Evelyn, there are five ness education head, replaces Dr·
Evelyn Ferree, a sophomore at children in the Ferree family: William H. Zeigel as Eastern's fa·
Eastern, is a member of the Illinois Kathleen, 14, at home; Paul, 29, culfy representative to the lnte
Typical Farm Family named at the agricultural attache with the U. S. slate Intercollegiate Athletic Con'
State Fair in August. Mr. and Mrs. Embassy in Mexico City; Bernard, ference. Dr. Zeigel has held the of·
Virgil Ferree of Mattoon are her 20, in the Army; and two other fice for many years. Dr. Thomps
parents. Governor Stratton present- daughters, Mrs. George Reinhart has been a member of the stude
ed a 1593 Packard Clipper to the of Tuscola and Mrs. John Trueblood faculty board at Eastern.
Ferrees as the top prize in the con- of Mattoon.

PAGE SIX

The Class of '.03 Had These Teachers

This was Eastern's 1903 faculty. Missing from this picture is Dr.. E. H. Taylor of Charleston, then on leave
for ~tudy at Harvard. Henry Johnson, the country's leading teacher of historians, was among the last surviving
memers of the group pictured above, but on October 3 Henry Johnson died after a brief illness. The news
of his death came to Eastern on the day the college celebrated Dr. R. G. Buzzard's twentieth anniversary as
~sident. Mr. Johnson served at Charleston from 1899 to 1906, then went to Columbia University and took
up his long and illustrious career there. So far as is known, Thomas Henry Briggs is the only surviving member
of this group. He is an emeritus professor at Columbia.

L. to r., beginning at top-L. C. Lord, Alice M. Pratt, Francis G. Blair, Caroline A. Forbes, Mr. Briggs, Char-
lotte Kluge. Second row-Thomas l. Hankinson, Elmer Shepard, Anna Piper, Clara M. Snell, Katharine Gill,
Otis W. Caldwell, W. M. Evans. Third row-Ellen A. Ford, Francis E. Wetmore, George D. Hubbard, Charlotte
locum, Edna T. Cook. Bottom row-Eva Russell, Thornton Smallwood, Mr. Johnson, Elizabeth Branch, Fred-
erick A. Koch, Florence M. Beck.

- - - - - --

Life NEA Members Dies in Auto Accident P. J. Van Horn, a member of the

Among life members of the Na- Robert Gene Murphy, who high school and college staff at
would have finished his work at
tional Education Association are Eastern this quarter, was killed in Eastern since 1935, is on leave this
~stern graduates Raymond Cook, an auto accident this fall. Murphy year. He .and his family are
Helen Conover, Millard Yount, Cecil was a member of Sigma Pi. He mar- located in the Bee Hive Trailer Park,
~ fmith, Catherine Stapp, and Elsie ried Barbara Ann Rosborough in Tempe, Ariz., where Mr. Van Horn
1951 . She survives him. is working at Arizona State College.
oan. The address is 939 Apache Blvd.

PAGE SEVEN

Panthers Goin Weight in Backfield, Line

Sophomore N ucleus Squad Loses Opener
To Strong Opponents

With two opening losses beh i

them, the Eastern Panthers w II

play their second Interstate lntert

collegiate Athletic Conference cone

test October 10 by tackling Mich

gan Normal at Charleston.

In the season opener at Charlel

ton, Coach Maynard 0'.Brien

charges were downed 30-0 by a

strong Lincoln University elevel

from Jefferson City, Mo. In theil

opening llAC game against Centri

Michigan, the defending leagul

champions, at Mt. Pleasant, thd

Panthers were defeated 33-6.

Four sophomore har.riers will carry the brunt of the running for Coach O'Brien has express
Coach Clif White this fall. They are, I. to r.-Jim Edmundson, Brownstown; some optimism, however, concerrl
Chuck Matheny, Paris; Jim Mitchell, Newton; and Fred Gore, Danville. ing a better record in the 1953
The Panthers won their first meet, run against Southern, 26-29. llAC standings. Last season Easterl
had a 1-5 record in league comt

Harriers Field Youngest I/AC Squad; petition and wound up in the cellar.
Back from the service is Bol:i

Win Opener 26-29 From Southern Smith, 200-pound halfback; frorl
Downers Grove, who earned le

Coach Clifton White, cross coun- harriers to winning cross country ters in 1947, 1948, and 1950. Alstl
try mentor at Eastern, fielded the seasons during his freshman and back in Panther colors is Harry BalA
youngest harrier squad in the In- sophomore years. ler, 195-pound fullback · frorl
terstate Intercollegiate Athletic Con- Wheaton. Bauler has returned to
ference October 3 when Eastern Eastern took third in the llAC in action completely recovered frorl
met Southern Illinois at Charles- 1948, as Curtis ran fourth, and sec- injuries suffered in 1950.
ton. ond in 1949, with Curtis finishing
in fifth position. Sixteen of the 70 players \uho
In that opening meet against reported for practice were lette
Southern, the Eastern Harriers Freshmen out for the squad are men, including Smith, Bauler, a nd
came out victorious 26-29. Chuck Wesley Walker, Danville; Gordon Roy Hatfield. Hatfield lettered as a
Matheny captured second place be- McElwain, Casey; Ed Worthington, center in 1949. He was recent
hind Bob Gregory of Southern. Scottland; Bob Danley, Lincoln; and discharged from the service.
Joe Mansfield, Paris.
Bob Thrash, sophomore fro
Returning from last year's squad Cross country schedule is: Oct. Tolono, is calling signals for th4
that took second in the llAC meet 3, Southern at Charleston; Oct. 10, Panthers. Other quarterbacks to sell
at Macomb are four sophomores. Northern at DeKalb; Oct. 17, Illi- action are Roger West, Wyan
A returning veteran of recent years nois Normal at Charleston; Oct. 24, freshman, and Sam Anderso
and five freshmen complete the Southern at Carbondale; Oct. 31, sophomore transfer from Washin
group. Lost to Coach White by Bradley at Peoria; Nov 17, Western
graduation is Jack Sims, Eastern at Macomb; Nov. 14, llAC meet at ton University.

speedster who ran third in the 1952 Charleston. Also out for practice but inel

league meet. gible to take part in intercollegia

The four lettermen back are Lt. Livingston Taylor, son of Dr. varsity competition is Gary And
Fred Gore, Danville; Jim Mitchell, E. H. Taylor, emeritus head of the son, 205-pound Litchfield quart
Newton; Chuck Matheny, Paris; Eastern mathematics department, back and a transfer from the Un
won the Southwest conference ten- versity of Ill inois. The conferen
and Jim Edmundson, St. Elmo. nis tournament doubles in late Au- has ruled that Anderson is eligib
Glen Curtis, Paris, one of the gust, teaming with Lt. Charles Ket- to play with the B-squad.
tering of Hinsdale. The victory en-
llAC's top cross country runners titled the duo to represent Ellington Other lettermen back are tackl
and trackmen in 1948 and 1949, AFB in the Air Force-wide tennis Gail Borton (225), and Don Mags
has re-enrolled at Eastern. tournament at Bermuda. men (246); guards Don Calvin (17
and Joe Summerville (206); en
Curtis, recently discharged af-
ter service in Korea, led the Panther

PAGE EIGHT

Strategy Conference

Coach Maynard "Pat" O'Brien, second from left, cal Is footbal I staff together for strategy conference at
~actice session. With Coach O'Brien are, left to right, John Sowinski, '51, a graduate student who is lending

a hand; Bill Groves, B-team mentor; and John Nanovsky, varsity assistant. ·
This season will mark the eighth that Coach O'Brien has been on the Eastern P. E. staff. One of those

eight years, 1951-52, he spent at the University of Illinois on sabbatical leave.

Hank Carter (160), Ron Landers Carey Named Basketball Coach
(195), and Jim Griffith (196); cen-
ter ~rnold Franke (200); halfbacks Robert A. Carey of Berlin, Wis- College, Kirksville. He will do no
Chuck Edgington (182), Gary New- consin, has been chosen to succeed coaching.
ell (160), and John O'Dell (155); Dr. William A. Healey on the coach-
and fullback Jim Fredenberger ing staff at Eastern. · Carey is a 1943 graduate of the
(170). State Teachers College, laCrosse,
Healey, assistant professor of Wis. He received the M.S. degree
hnther opponent for the 1953 physical education and varsity bas- in physical education at the Univer-
9iecoming game will be North- sity of Wisconsin in 1947 and has
east Missouri of Kirksville. Bill ketball coach at Eastern for seven completed the dissertation for the
Jofealey, former basketball coach at years, has accepted a position as Doctor of Physical Education de- "
listern, is now director of athletics head of the division of health, phy- gree at Indiana University. He ex-
at l<irksville. The Homecoming sical education, and recreation at pects to receive this degree in Feb-
game is scheduled for 2 p.m. Northeast Missouri State Teachers ruary, 1954.

IJmaining football games: Carey taught and served as as-
Oct. 2-Central Michigan, away
sistant coach for two years at the
Oct. 10-Michigan Normal, home
(2 p.m.) Band Day Lacrosse State Teachers College and

Oct. 17-Northwest Missouri, for four years was varsity basket-
home (2 p.m.) Homecoming
bal I coach in the high school at
Oct. 24-Navy Pier, away
Negaunee, Michigan. At Negaunee
Oct. 31-Southern Illinois, away
Carey-coached basketball teams ,
Nov. 7-Western Illinois, home
(1 :30 p.m.) Scout Day won two district and two confer-

Nov. 14-lllinois Normal, away ence championships and once ad-
Nov. 21-Northern Illinois, home
vanced to the semi-finals of the
(1 :30 p.m.) Parents' Day
Michigan State High School Bas-
l>mecoming Contest
ketbal I Tournament. ·
lastern's harriers will meet Illi-
nois Normal in a cross country duel Carey is married and the father
at •alftime of Homecoming game. of three children. He served in the
Army Air Corps from 1943 to 1945
and was athletic non-com for the
Third Infantry Regiment in the

Army of Occupation from 1945 to
1946 in Germany'.

PAGE NINE

Richard Kepner, '21, Writes of Old-Timers Help
Round-the~World Trip

Septeber 24, 1953 from which place my mother's peo- Bob Smith
ple had emigrated to Trois Rivieres,
Dear Alumnus Editor: Canada, in 1635. Harry Bauler

I thought you might be interest- We went on to Switzerland, Dr. Byrnes Writes
ed in some of the following for a which is a very beautiful country, for 'The Instructor'
news item in the Alumnus. You and saw Mrs. Kepner's relatives
may write the item to suit yourself. whom we had not met previously. Dr. Arthur F. Byrnes, direct
She was born and raised in Basel, of audio-visual education at Eas
I left Honolulu May 15 with my her father having been city archi- ern, has been named film editor o
wife and three daughters-Barbara, tect there for many years. "The Instructor," a magazine for
17, Sarah, 15, and Marguerite, 13- teachers. In addition to his workl a
on a trip around the world. My ma- We saw the usual sights in Flor- Eastern, he will write a bi-mont
jor objective was the annual meet- ence, Rome, and Athens. We were column reviewing educatio
ing in Gloucester, England, of the privileged to attend a symphony films.
Royal Medico-Psychological Asso- in Florence and the performance
ciation, to which I have belonged of "Aida" in the Termi de Cara- Dr. Byrnes has
for some four years now. I had also· calla, the large outdoor theater in monthly Audio and Visual
been invited to speak at the Delhi Rome. We visited Cairo, Gizeh, appearing in Illinois Educati
Medical Association in India, and Sakkara, and Memphis, rode camels journal of the 11 linois Education
at the Thailand Medical Association and donkeys iry the Sahara Desert, sociation, for the past two yea
in Bangkok. and were photographed with the
Sphinx and the pyramids. We stop- "The Instructor" is second on
We made practically all of the ped briefly in Karachi·, Delhi, and to the National Education Ass
trip by plane, with the exception of Calcutta. India certainly needs tion Journal in circulation. A Da
the journey from New York to some help, since their standards of ville, N. Y., publication, it ha
Southhampton, which was on the living and sanitation are very low 125,000 subscribers.
new SS UNITED STATES, the holder in many places. We stopped over-
of the transatlantic speed record. night in Rangoon, and . then pro-
ceeded to Bangkok. Thailand really
We spent about six weeks in
mainland U.S.A., visiting friends
and relatives, seeing old home-

steads of the family in Illinois, Ker;i- does have the unusual temples you

tucky, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, read about.' We then preceded to

and the Province of Quebec. Hong Kong, and to Tokyo, visiting

We saw my brother, Paul H. Kep- Atami, Hakone, Yokohama, and
ner, '25, and his wife and child. Kamakura. We were fortunate
Paul is teaching in the Mount Ver- enough to get a clear view and
non High ~chool in Alexandria, Vir- some good colored pictures of Mt.
Fuji, Japan's sacred mountain, and
ginia.
to see the great bronze Buddha at
The children were at the bottom Kamakura.
of the Mammoth Cave, and on the
top of such items as ski lifts, the We returned by plane in good
Washington Monument, the Statue · condition, having skirted shipping
of Liberty, Eiffel Tower, Notre strikes, railroad strikes, earth-
Dame de Paris, etc. They visited quakes, typhoons, and cholera.

assorted schools across the country The children benefited greatly
so that Barbara might decide where from this trip and certainly in-
to go next year. We were through creased their knowledge of and
Charleston but it was on Sunday interest in world geography, poli-
and nobody seemed to be at home. tics, and civilizati.ons.

We did visit the campus and peered Very truly yours,

through the windows. Richard D. Kepner, '21

We took in a Shakespearean play Coppock Advances
at the Stratford-on-Avon Theater,
saw "Hiawatha" with the London Dr. William H. Coppock, teacher
Symphony, visited Sarah's pen pal of chemistry at Eastern from 1939-
in Bristol, England, and visited Ox- 42, has been promoted to head of
ford University. the department of chemistry this
year at Drake University.
In Paris we saw the usual sights
and visited Mortagne-au-Perche,

PAGE TEN

Now Find.the .Macon County Club Fryes Qualify as
Holds Fall Meeting 'Eastern Family'
Mistakes in The Macon County Eastern State

This One, Kevin Club is holding a luncheon meeting The Charles Frye family of
Thursday, Oct. 8, at the new Y.M. Berwyn, Ill., qualifies as an "East-
Dr. Kevin Guinagh, Eastern's C.A. building in Decatur, in conjunc-
tion with the South Central Divi- ern Family" in all respects. Mr.
l eign languages head, thinks all sion of I. E. A. institute. Dr. H. DeF. Frye, '26, '30, is principal of the
ege students should work on Widger . and Miss Annie Weller, Laverne School in Berwyn. At East-
school newspaper. "This.experi- emeritus members of the Eastern ern he was an early leader in the
ence," he states "will forever endue faculty, expect to attend, as does Phi Sigma Epsilon fraternity.
the average student with a healthy
sus.picio n of the veracity of . the Stanley Elam, director of alumni Mrs. Frye is the former Dorothy
services. Ann Hovius, '27, one of the chil-
lnted word as it appears in news- dren G>f J. J. Hovius of Mattoon, all
of whom attended Eastern. With

J'pDerr.s.G"u1. nagh's conv1.ct1. on . th"1s Dr. Guinagh enjoyed it all im- her family in college, Mrs. Frye has
mensely. However, he took just one returned to school work and is now
in columnist's effort apart and found -directing the Seguin School for
four factual errors in the first four Mentally Retarded in Berwyn.
b1atter arises from a recent experi- paragraphs. Hence his advice to Started in January of 1951, the
college students. school is in effect a pilot project
ence with the metropolitan press, in Illinois, cooperating with a divi-
as ~ell, perhaps, as with the East- If you're curious, here are the sion of the state superintendent's
errors: "A college professor recent- office concerned with the education
ern State News, which he advised ly translated a 20,000-word manu- of exceptional children. Ray Gra-
script ... " (Nope. 100,000.) "For ham is state director.
for several years. Last spring Dr. his labors, which took him more
than a month . . . " (I'll say. It was This fall daughter Sandra Frye,
•inagh published a translation of nearer four years.) " . . . he re- a graduate of Morton High School
ceived a check for $500 from his of Cicero, is a freshman at Eastern.
•rgil's Aeneid. A few weeks later school." (That IS a fat one. Imagine Her brother, Charles Jr., who at-
Eastern paying $500 for a Latin tended Eastern for two years, is a
Mrs. Guinagh won a $1000 prize translationJ) "The wife opened it student of business and mathe-
and out rolled a check for $1000 matics at the University of Illinois.
.nsored by the Kelvinator Com- (for writing) on the subject, "Why
I like this refrigerator.' " (It was a Mr. and Mrs. Frye live at 3331
pany for telling in 25 w~r~s. why Clinton, Berwyn.

she liked the Kelvinator stove.

Dr. Guinagh was quoted · in a

UP ~ispatch as follows: "My· wife

earrts $40 a word for her efforts,

while I earn only a dollar for 40

lords." His l 00,000 word transla-

tion was purchased by Rinehart and

9npany for $500, plus a penny a

copy royalty.

UP had it about right, but then stove.)

the fun began. Clever columnists "At this point," says Dr. Guin- Violet Writes of New
and commentators all over the agh, "I quit reading. You don't
have to eat the whole egg to tell Daughter, New Work
Entry, hard up for copy, seized that it is bad."
n this bit of irony as if it had Violet Podesta (Mrs. Richard
eless significance. They drew If he'd read further, he would Meyer), '39, of 2626 Letchworth

all kinds of morals from it, most have found an insult even to his Pkwy., Toledo, 0 ., writes of the
of them highly flavored with anti- wife: "By the way, I understand the birth of Pamela Ann, now five
ihtellectualism and strongly sym- college professor's wife doesn't months old, ''With John Michael,
l thetic to the "really creative" -even use the refrigerator which she age 20 months, I've been a busy
s. Guinagh. Well, she is. prefers to any other brand." 'mommie,' " she says. Neverthe-

less, Violet has managed to attend

Miss Thomas Suffers Stroke University of Toledo e v e n i n g
classes, working toward a Master's

Miss Blanche Thomas, registrar at ·Eastern since in business administration. She

May of 1922, suffered a stroke just before fall regis- already holds the Master's in guid-

tration day and has not yet returned to her duties. ance from the University of Wis-

On Tuesday, September 29, she was taken to Bill- consin. Violet is also active in a

ings Hospital in Chicago for physiotherapy, which Tri Sigma alumnae group, being

is expected to hasten her recovery. She expects to currently president. Mr. Meyer is

stay at least two weeks. still with the Libbey Owens Ford

The stroke left Miss Thomas' right side partially Glass Company as assistant head of

paralyzed. She is still unable to use her arm but the technical control department.

can move her leg. Violet also notes that her sister,

Miss Thomas came to Eastern from the Univer- Lee, is now with her family in

sity of Chicago, where she worked in the comptrol- Naples, Italy, where Major Hick-

ler's office. man is currently stationed.

PAGE ELEVEN

Random Former Faculty Members

Alumni Notes Applaud Old-Time Chapel Idea
Every officer of the Eastern Divi·

sion of the I. E. A. this year is Miss Annie Weller, former geog- look through Miss McKinney's Mr.
raphy department head at Eastern, Lord and reflect on those chaPE41
either an alumnus of Eastern or a who invited former faculty mem- exercises and their content ...
bers to return for the "Old-Fash-
member of the college faculty, with ioned Chapel,'' has received many "Please believe that if I am not
the exception of the vice-president, letters in return. Among them are
Clark Dennis. Dr. Kevin Guinagh, the following: there in person, at least I am therd
foreign languages head, is presi- in spirit, and my memory of thos4
dent; Dr. William Zeigel, director From Harry Giles: days is still keen."
of teacher placement, is secretary; "I think it is a wonderful idea to
and G. W. Dunn, '26, '30, is treas- have the old-time chapel exercise. Mr. Cook is dean of the Collegd
urer. The executive committee is I will be with you in spirit, but on of Education, University of Minnef
composed of Theresa Reiss, '46; that day I will have to be in Phila- sota.
Robert Wright, '38; and U. L. Evans, delphia, where I. will be working
'44. The state committee members with principals of elementary, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne P. Hughel
are Ray Lane, '40,- finance; and secondary and special schools. writes:
Cecil Smith, '32, '39, professional "The memories of El are very
and public relations. strong, and I am sure that in all "Very few things would give us
the years that have passed since I more pleasure than to return to
Harry Stanton, who attended was there, I have never had a more Charleston for Homecoming and
Eastern for two terms in 1901, died important educational experience the special service . . . We regre.
last June in Pana, Ill., where he had than was given me by the presi- so much, that neither of us can do
been city clerk for 46 consecutive dent, faculty and students. it.
years. He was never defeated in "I am delighted to know that the
20 city elections, and had the dis· Health Education Building will be "Our annual Safety Congre
tinction of being the only Republi- called 'Lantz Gymnasium.'" will be held during the week
can to win in several of them. It is October 19. As usual, I have a
believed that he held a national rec- Mr. Giles is director of the Cen- number of pre-Congress mee1'
ord in length of service as city ter for Human Relations Studies, ings .••
clerk. Stanton taught for two years School of Education, New York
near Pana and in 1903 was named University. "When Wayne, Jr., left home to
principal of the Pana Grade School, attend the Naval Academy, Ga~
serving four years. From Earl Daniels: started in a mild manner to do sul:I
"Your letter about the old- stitute teaching. For the past twd
The Cassius Richardsons of Rob· years it has been almost a full
time chapel tempts me. How I time job.
inson found ·that connection with should like to be there! But it is,
of course, quite out of the question, ''We shall miss seeing our of
the National Education Association except in imagination. Be sure I time friends, wish to be remembel
shall be with you in thought on ed to them, and hope for all of you
took them several thousand miles 17 October. I shall hear Mr. Taylor a most pleasant reunion."
beginning, "Let us now praise
apart last summer. While Cassius Mr. Hughes is director of th4
famous men"-for that, surely, is school and college division of th4
(Class of '38) served as assistant the selection he will choose. National Safety Council, with o ·
fices in Chicago.
supervisor for a NEA tour which "My good wishes to you and all
your committee. My congratula· Monts Moves, Reports
took him through the Northwest tions to Mr. Lantz on his newest
honor. My greetings to anyone on long Western Trip
U. S., Canada, and Alaska, Mar- who may remember I am a former
faculty member." Allen S. Monts, '48, is teachi
garet Ellen (nee Stephenson, '37) industrial arts in the Danville, 111..
Mr. Daniels is a member of the High School this fall. This summ
was attending the national conven- Department of English at Colgate he and Mrs. Monts, the form
University, Hamilton, N. Y. Jane Lionberger, '43, took a seve
tion of the NEA at Miami Beach, week trip through the Wesl
From Walter W. Cook: Among persons with whom theV
Fla., as a Crawford County repre· "It is not likely that I shall be visited were Marion Ryan, '42, of
able to attend the old-time chapel South Pasadena, Calif. Amo
sentative. · service . • • points of interest the Monts visit
were Mesa Verde National Par
(Continued from page 3) "I want you to know that the the Petrified Forest, Painted Deseil
memories of those chapel services Grand Canyon, Hoover Dam, ~
Nuevo Leon, Monteray, Mex., in at nine o'clock with the faculty on quoia National Park, Yosem
1941. In 1947 he took the Doctor the stage, are among my pleasant- National Park, Salt Lake City, Ye
of Medicine from the same univer- est memories of Charleston. I still lowstone National Park, Mt. Rus
sity. He has been resident physician more Memorial, and the Badlan
of Our Lady of Nursing Hospital in
Cincinnati for four years. Dr. Rodin
is now on the University of Illinois
medical staff.

PAGE TWELVE

Keeping •1n touch

number of present and past faculty exception of five years in military

members. service. He was a field artillery
Christina Dunbar (Mrs. A~cher
captain in World War I for two

Edwin Sauer), '06, reports the death years and entered World War 11 in

of her husband. Mr. Sauer died in 1942 as a lieutenant colonel in the

December, 1951. field artillery. He remained in Italy

Albert Oliver Bainbridge, '06, with the Allied Commission in

Ernest Freeman, '03, is the secre- was elected village clerk in Sauga- 1945-46, helping develop agricul-
tarY. of the newly built Coles Coun- tuck, Mich, last March. His new ad-
ty ~emorial Airport. The county dress is Box 125, Saugatuck. tural programs with the Italian gov-
projecl was dedicated in ceremon-
~ on July 4. Mr. Freeman is a Lois Margaret Davis, '07, has re- ernment. '
•rleston resident. tired as principal of the Lincoln-
wood School in Evanston. Dr. Snapp held the A. B., B. S.,
Bessie Bradshaw Byers (Mrs.
Homer Davisson), '04, reports that Agnes Barrett (Mrs. C. S. M. S., and Ph. D. degrees from the .
her husband was honored by the Wehrle), '07, writes that she now
fort Wayne Art Museum of Fort has three granddaughters: Linda University of Illinois. He was one
Wayfle, Ind., in a July art exhibit. K., 9, Mary E., 6, and Elaine, 10
She comments that it is rather rare months. Mrs. Wehrle lives at 317 of ten Eastern alumni chosen to re-
for the Museum to honor a painter N. Pine St., Centralia, Ill. Mr.
luring his lifetime. Wehrle is a retired baker. ceive the honorary doctor of

David Dewhirst, '04, owner of Agnes Mabel Freeman (Mrs. pedagogy in 1949 when the col-
the Myers and Dewhirst retail lum- T. Duffy), '09, reports that her only
ber and coal company of Maroa, child, Frank Thomas Duffy, was lege celebrated its first half cen-
111., regretfully notes that his class killed in an automobile accident in
is teldom mentioned in "Keeping Whittier, Calif., in October of 1952. tury of service.
in Touch ." A quick check shows Mr. Duffy was a teacher at Whittier
that the Alumni Office has addres- College. Mrs. Duffy is a Charleston One of "the most highly regarded
ses for only 10 of the living mem- resident.
bers of the Class of '04, which con- members of the University agricul-
isisted of 26 persons. Mary Viola Bruner (Mrs. Leo
Tehan), '09, died on May 5 at Ur- ture staff, Dr. Snapp was lauded
John Chauncey DeWolfe, '04, bana, Ill.
notes the death of two old by his associates not only for im-
liends and classmates: Prof. Ros- Effie Lillian Feagan (Mrs. Harvey
coe Snapp at Champaign, Ill. (see Rechnitzer), '09, reports that she portant contributions to the science
Class of '10), and Louis L. McDon- and her husband are "enjoying our
retirement in Charleston to the full- of beef production, in which he
est extent.''
was a specialist and author of a

widely used textbook, but for his

contributions to better human rela-

tionships.

ald at Bernardsville, N. J. The lat- Evalena Heeb (Mrs. F. R. John- Charles Franklin Hill, '11, retired
ter died on August 13. A member son), '10, writes that she has a third
of the Class ·of 1905, McDonald grandson, born August 24, his recently from his position as head
of the research laboratory of West-
was for many years a national brother's birthday. Mr. Johnson is inghouse Electric Corporation at
Pittsburgh and returned to Charles-
leader in Boy Scout work. a veterinarian at Areola, 111. ton to make his permanent home
here. He has purchased the Rino
Mr. DeWolfe has been a lawyer Ivan W. King, '10, is chief medi- Bianchi ·property at 921 Tenth St.
~ince 1910. He now lives at 217 cal officer at the V. A. Center, Mrs. Hill, also a former Eastern stu-
dent, is the former Mabel Gillman
S. ICuyler Ave., Oak Park, · 111., and Biloxi, Miss. ot Lerna.

has his offices at 77 Washington Maude Cottingham (Mrs. Hal Walter Wilson Jennings, '11, a
professor of economics at the Uni-
SI., Chicago 2. Eugene Martin), '10, has taught versity of Kentucky since 1926, is
author of a book, Twenty Giants of
geography in a junior high school American Business, published this
in Cleveland, 0., since 1919. Her year by The Exposition Press, 386
home is at 13606 Cedar Rd., Uni- Fourth Ave., N. Y. 16. Mr. Jennings
versity Heights 18, 0. 1 lives at 1336 Fontaine Rd., Lexing-
ton 30, Ky.
Roscoe Snapp, '1 0, died Iast
Mary A. Brewer, '05, retired in Nema Elnora BlackBurn (Mrs.
June, 1951, after a lifetime of James Whitehouse), '12, is now
laching. She lives at 507 West teaching in the new Edgewood In-
rt\eeker Ave., Puyallup, Wash. termediate School in Highland Park,
Ill. Mrs. Whitehouse writes that the
Charles W. Fender, '06, who has June at the age of 63 at the Carle school is "ultra-modern and a
beauty."
lerated an insurance business in Hospital in Urbana. Dr. Snapp had
rkeley, Calif., since 1922, writes · been an active member of the Uni- Alma Elizabeth Furste (Mrs. Fred
at while on the campus at Char- versity of Illinois College of Agri- George Homann), '12, has a new
ston last year he visited with a culture staff since 1915, with the
PAGE THIRTEEN

street address, 428 Woodlawn, Helen Louis Comer (Mrs. Arthur this year, having retired in Jul-.1
Mattoon, Ill. Anson Taylor), '13, has a new
grand-daughter, Susan Taylor. Mrs. after 35 years in the schools ol
Elizabeth Crowe (Mrs. Frederick Taylor is substitute teaching in the
Lucas Hannum), '12, began teach- elementary schools of Evanston, Ill. Robinson, Ill. At the time of he~
ing fifth grade at Port Isabel, Tex., retirement she was· principal of thd
on Sept. 1. - Ronald L. King of Charleston Robinson High School.
died in Augltst of this year. He had
Denna Fleming, '12, stopped for been for many years cashier of the Earl William Anderson, '16,
a visit at Eastern on September 23 Charleston National Bank and a writes that he recently completed a
near the end of a 9,000 mile, two- well-known civic leader. Mrs. King, survey of teacher education in thei
month tour which took him and the former Bess Shrieve, '13, con- Oregon State System of High~
Mrs. Fleming as far north and west tinues to live at 875 Eleventh St. Education. Dr. Anderson was actin
as British Columbia and included a executive secretary of the Associ
stop in Los Angeles to deliver a in Charleston. She has resigned as tion for Higher Education durin.
Rotary Club address. Dr. Fleming secretary for the reunion of her the month of September. He now
is chairman of the political science class but plans to attend. Others lives at 2585 Dorset Rd., Columbul
department at Vanderbilt Univer- who have already indicated their 12, 0.
sity and is a well-known author in intention of coming are Mrs. Irene
his field. Malhoit Smith of South Rockwood, Herman L. Cooper, '16, formel
Mich.; Dr. and Mrs. E. H. Steinmetz teacher and school principal who
Mildred Sharp, '12, · who has of Orona, Me.; Mr. and Mrs. A. F. for several years operated a busil
been teaching English at Bloom Goldsmith of Findlay, O.,; and Mrs•. ness at Oak Park, Ill., died August
Township High School, Chicago Helen Comer Taylor of Evanston,
Heights, was at home near Mattoon 111. 26. Mrs. Cooper, the former Bet4
this summer, ill with arthritis. She
expected to return to her work Elsie Em:ly Beatty, '14, has new nice Corzine, '15, continues to livd
when able. at the Cooper residence, 217 S.
street . address, 405 Summer St., East Ave., Oak Park.
Miss Ruby Harris, '12, is on leave
of absence from her position in the Rockford, 111. Bess Leonora Graham (Mrs. Mar-
geography eepartment at Eastern shall 0. Robison), '16, teaches thel
this year to edit geography film Katharine Hudson (Mrs. Walter intermediate grades in a Peori•
strips for use in elementary schools. County school. Her home is- at 62Q
She may be addressed in care of Balch), '15, has a new address, 970 Main St., Peoria. She writes that he4
Rand McNally and Co., 536 South son, Lt. Donald G. Robison, is makl
Clark, or at the Palmer House in Berry Ave., Los Altos, Calif. The
Chicago. ing a career of military service. He
Balches' son, Alfred H., married
returned from duty with the Marini
Marie Boone at Elkton, Ky., last Corps in Korea last March.

spring. He is an ensign in the the Leah Todd, '16, attended th~
coronation of Queen Elizabeth of
U. S. Navy. ·

Mary Newlin, '15, is not teaching

First Outdoor Commencement

Eastern's outdoor theater was used for the first time at the first,, full-scale August commencement
summer. Here are the 73 Bachelor's and 18 Master's candidates just before diplomas were awarded.

PAGE FOURTEEN

~land in June. By accident she Writes Book Bourgeois is employed with a
t Mrs. Mary W. Spurrier, also of
building service company in Oak
-rleston, near London. Neither Park.
Miss Todd nor Mrs. Spurrier knew.
~ois Genevieve Adams, '21,
mat the· other planned toe se the
writes that she has a new home at
coronat1011
"'innie Cassady (Mrs. J. J. lies), 5 Granger Place, Buffalo, N. Y.

'l 6, of Paris,. 11_1., writes that her Ruby Frances Grafton (Mrs.
hobby i:. painting. She has had
several paintings hung in the Verne Barnes), '21, who teaches
Swope Galleries, Terre Haute, Ind.
piano at her home in Charleston,
Leafy Demaree, '17, who now
jives at 1613 Eleventh St. in Char- writes that her son, Burton, took
leston, Ill., took a trip to the Black
Hills and to Denver in July. Miss his pre-forestry at Eastern and re-
•maree is an. o!ficer in the Eastern
lfumni Assoc1at1on. ceived the Master of Forestry de-

Bonnie Pearl Fortney (Mrs. H. F. gree from the University of Mich-
rowell), '17,, is treasurer of the Na-
tional Woman's Christian Temper- igan in June of this year. He is
anctnion, having taken the office
last vember. She writes that her now in timber management en-
lother, who would have been 92
in ~ember, died last June 6 in gineering in the Rogue River Na-
Casey, 111.
tional Forest, Medora, Ore.
Edna Flo Donaldson (Mrs. Vernon
ipley), '18, took a position as Trevor K. Serviss, '21, became
I librarian in Wichita, Kan.,
editor-in-chief of D. C. Heath and
three years ago. Her home is at
426 N. Topeka, Wichita. Company, Boston, educational pub-

Goldie Dorothy funk, '18, of lishers, on July l of this year. Mr.
Jasey, Ill., retired in June after 34
~ears of teaching in the state of Serviss has been with Heath for
llli.,ois.
Stella Craft Tremble, '22 many years as an editor. His home
Elsie Aten (Mrs. W. S. Kurtz), '18, is at 285 Columbus Ave., Boston
is •uthor of a prize-winning poem
en ered in the amateur class of the 16, Mass."
~erated Woman's Clubs contest
this year. Titled "Retrospect," it ex- " . . . I spend summers up in Myra Esther Boyer, '22, has just
..esses the author's veiw of what
mtle good life" consists of. the Pacific Northwest where I have purchased a home in Oakland,

illio...Gage Carman, '19, teaches high a daughter who has three of the Calif., after living there nine years.
llhool in Kansas City, Mo. His
i.ome is at 7 East Sixty-seventh St., finest small boys anywhere in the Her address is 8024 Winthrope St.
lensas City 5.
Universe. Take my word for that .. Mary Pauline Bowman (Mrs.
Harriette Foreman (Mrs. Robert
W. Serviss), '19, lives at 1309 "Wherever I go, I look up the Miles C. Johnson), '22, is teaching
Rood Ave., Grand Junction, Colo.
Harness Race Horse situation. in grade six in a Toledo, 0.,
Inez Minerva Davidson (Mrs.
Inez M. Ward), '19, is teaching Really enjoy the sulky racing, and school. Last year she served as a
lrade six in the elementary school
at 'Shelbyville, Ill. Her address is association with the owners and critic teacher and taught for proba-
312 N. Walnut St., Shelbyville.
drivers. I have written several tionary teachers. Mr. Johnson is a
Harriet Ruth Bell, '19, has retired
from her teaching duties in the Fair- thousand articles which have been · district engineer for the DeVilbiss

' Ill., Schools. Miss Bell retire published from Harrisburg, Pa., to Company.
September.
Edward E. Hood, '19, a science Los Angeles-all of them concern- Stella Craft (Mrs. Shirley Trem-
tacher at Evansville, Ind., vice-
l'esident of the Evansville Teach- ing harness horse racing." ble), '22, who has been a school-
ers Association, and one of East-
trn's most prolific correspondents, Hood enclosed two addresses of teacher and housewife half her life,
t'rites as follows:
former students: Robert R. Pampe,· is author of The Silver Chain, a first
332 LaMont Drive, Decatur, Ga., book of poems published in late

and William McKinley Turner, 5802 August by the Wake-Brook Press

Lockheed Ave., Whittier, Calif. of Sanl;>ornville, N. 11.

Edith Crowe, '19, writes of The book, which can be read in
spending the summer in Burling- a couple of hours, leaves the reader
ton, Vt., where she took some sum- with a refreshing sense of having
mer courses at the University of met someone who takes a healthy
Vermont. She says Vermont is "a delight in the simple and beautiful
beautiful cool place to spend a things about her. The book is rich
summer." in imagery and economical in
painting forth the scenes and peo-
Josephine Byers (Mrs. Ralph ple Mrs. Tremble has known.
Doner), '19, has moved to Hunts-
ville, Ala., where she and Mr. ·Although it is her first book,
Doner have built a new home. They Mrs. Tremble is a veteran free lance
moved to 1404 Gill St. in 1952. author. She has had dozens of

lie Marie James, (Mrs. Borel 0. poems and articles published, parti-

Bourgeois), '20, writes that she is cularly since she retired from teach-

still working hard as principal of ing a few years ago. Her teaching

a school of tutoring at Oak Park, career includes eight years as an

Ill. "It's a great satisfaction to put English instructor in the suburban

'scholastically lost' children onto schools of Detroit, Mich. She taught

their 'learning' feet," she says. Mr. last in Mattoon. Now at home with

PAGE FIFTEEN

her husband at 850 Fourth Street in American Childhood Education dress is 4743 Grand Haven Rd.,
Charleston, she is a member of the group in Pontiac, Mich., where she Muskegon.
Woman's Club, Household Science teaches the intermediate grades.
Club, and Artists Guild of eastern Mrs. Johnson is now a graduate Edith Farn (Mrs. Jessie L. Dugan)J
Illinois. Mr. Tremble is a profession- student at Wayne University. Mr. '30, took a position as science suF4
al photographer with studios on the Johnson is a physiotherapist at ervisor of the Tangier, Ind., Schooll
south side of the Charleston square. the Henry Ford Hospital. this fall.

Omar Dale Alcorn, Sr., '23, is Florence Miller (Mrs. Gunnard · Charles A. Elliott, '29, '31, re,
now principal of the Waltonville, Nelson), '27, took the Master's de- ceived the Ed. D. from the Univel
Ill., High School. Mr. Alcorn took gree at Kansas City University this sit'{ of Missouri this summer. Elliotl
the position in June of this year. June. The Nelsons live at 8232 is a member of the Eastern indu•
Santa Fe Trail, Overland Park, Kan. trial arts staff. His dissertation dealt
Carrell W. Dunn, '25, is now with audio-visual materials used in
teaching mathematics in the Areola Emily Heistand (Mrs. Emily industrial education in the seconcl
Community High School. He serves Lynch), '27, is in the public relations ary schools of Illinois.
as guidance consultant and helps in and advertising department of the
the athletic department. Zale Jewelry Company, Dallas, Charlotte Wolf, ex-'31, was honl
Tex., as copy writer and associate ored by the grade school faculty at
Anna Elizabeth Parr (Mrs. Con- editor for the company's monthly Altamont this summer on the coml
ard C. Hogue), '26, writes that she magazine. Mrs. Lynch was advised pletion of 25 years of teaching. Be~
has a daughter, Jane Ann, who is a by her doctor to discontinue her sides teaching seventh grade, Mrsl
senior at Michigan State College. radio work because of a throat con- Wolf is local Red Cross chairmal
A son, David, is in Army Intelli- dition. Her address is 3612 Linden- helps with the Effingham Coun
gence in Tokyo, Japan. The senior wood, Dallas. fair, and has been active in Gi
Mr. Hogue is an associate manager Scouting and the Chamber of Coni
of the Guardian Life Insurance Gwendolyn Jeffries (Mrs. Wil- merce. Last summer she and othel
Company. The Hogues live at 919 liam Walters), '28, took a six-week members of her bowling team com4
Augusta St., Oak Park, Ill. tour of the West this summer, cov- peted in the National Woman1
ering 12,000 miles, with her hus- Bowling Tournament at Detroil
Wanda McDivitt (Mrs. Boyd), band and two daughters. Mr. Wal- Mich.
'27, has been a member of Gamma ters is a dentist. The Walters live at
chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma 5030 Sedgwick St., N. W., Wash- Alden Denzil Cutshall, '32, re-
since March of 1953. She is a secre- ington 16, D. C. ports the publication of an articll
tary in Paris, Ill. in the Philippine Geographica4
Letta Fern Kelley O'Brien, '30, is Journal in January of this yea11
Gladys Leona Conn (Mrs. Henry a foster home selector for the Lake Title of the article was "Trinidal
H. Horn), '27, is an office manager County, Ind., Department of Public Valley: Middle Latitude Hortic
in the Girl Scout Office, Des Welfare. She took the position in ture in the Philippines."
Moines, la. She and Mr. Horn, a 1945 and now lives at 701 Tennes-
welding instructor in the Solar Air- see, Gary, Ind. Leora Bainbridge (Mrs. Bobbie!
craft Company of Des Moines, live Clark), '33, and her family hd
on Route 1, Norwalk, la. Edwin Samuel Brauer, '30, is moved to Saugatuck, Mich., in Jui
now distributer of Shellane Bottle
Irma Lorene Bolan (Mrs. Melvin Gas in Muskegon, Mich. His ad- Alvin F. VonBehren, '33, hea
H. Johnson), '27, is president of the the new Nokomis Community LJn 1
School District No. 22 this year. Mr'.
Watch-Birds at Music Camp VonBehren was principal of the
Nokomis Township High School for
seven years prior to his selecti
for the superintendency.

Milton Ernest Baker, '34, died 011
July 16 of this year.

Harry Lee Fitzhugh, '34, has_bee
elected vice-president of the boa
of control of the Illinois Hig
School Association. Mr. Fitzhugh is
superintendent of the Franklin, Ill..
Schools.

Eastern alumni music teachers and graduate students in music look Murvil Barnes, '34, is the ne
on attentively at one ·of the Music Camp sessions last summer. The Music principal of the Woodrow Wils
Camp WC!S highly successful. It will be repeated and probably will be
expanded next year. Junior High School in Decatur, 111.

Barnes has been a consultant in
teaching aids for the Decatur sy•
tern since 1949, and before th4
served as a science teacher and ell'4
mentary school principal there.

PAGE SIXTEEN

'I• Mae Armstrong, '.~4, a Korean Adviser born July 3. Mr. Birch has three
other children, two girls and one
forL'e;i~rn l;aining school critic at Col. Archie McDivitt, '35 (right) boy.
and long-time director of
Homer Hendricks, '36, is the new Dorothy Ruth Fuller (Mrs. Frank
.:ntary education at the La- superintendent of schools at Ban- W. Sweet), '36, reports the birth of
gor, Mich., having left a high a daughter, Ann Elizabeth. The
~, Ind., Schools, has been ap- school principalship at Williamston, Sweets live at Watseka.
Mich., last spring. Mrs. Hendricks is
~ea·. In~tne9dma•tsstsrWiosthnaigntttiehprarsoCftoeaslulsegoghret,ofaCteadtlhiufe-. the former Forrest Erlene Weber, Paul Warren Bateman, '37, re-
'35. The Hendricks have four chil- ceived the degree of Master of
ity of Delaware and at Kent dren. Education at the Univers ity of Vir-
ginia this summer. Mr. Bateman
niversity, 0. She has also Marion Mathas, '36, sings with teaches in the Waynesboro High
the Indianapolis Maennerchor, old- School in Waynesboro, Va.
rved as a supervisor of student est continuous singing choral or-
ganization in the United States. It Horace Dane Bouslog, '37, is now
s;hing at Indiana State, Terre will celebrate its l OOth anniversary principal of the elementary school
next year. The group, now consist- in Chrisman, Ill.
Haute. ing of more than l 00 male voices,
Lt. ~I. Archie l. McDivitt, '35, is sang when the G.A.R. was organ- Cloyd Paskins, '37, is now teach-
ized in Indianapolis and also when ing social science and serving as
2Ksotrhea imental advisor for the it was disbanded recently. head of the department in the Ft.
Military Advisory Group, Myers, Fla., Junior and Senior High
Mr. Mathas, a teacher of indus- School. Paskins, who holds the M.
acN• 119 the ROK Army in training trial arts in the Indianapolis school A. from Duke University, has done
system, has been a member of the advanced work at the University of
and l>mbat. Col. McDivitt was re- /V\aennerchor for 14 years and is California, Louisiana State Univer-
secretary for the group this year. sity, the University of Pittsburgh,
called to active duty in February of and the university at Saltillo, Mex-
Clara Louise Balmer (Mrs. Wal- ico.
1952 and has been in Korea nearly ter Treece), '36, reports two trips
to southeast Illinois this year. How- Hazel Haskett, '37, and Phillip
a year. His wife, Dorothy, and two ever,, she and her family failed to Caldwell Addison of. Baintree,
get to Charleston. Mrs. Treece now Mass., were married last June 21
d ug· ters live at 603 N. Main St., lives at 408 S. Randall Ave., Madi- at Toledo, Ill. The newlyweds live
son, Wis., where Walter is a statis- at Coytesville, N. J. Mr. Addison
Paris, Ill. tician at the Badger Ordnance is employed by the American Bra-
Works, Liberty Powder Co. The zilian Suppliers, Inc., in New York.
Harold Cottingham, '35, spent Treeces have twin boys 11 months Mrs. Addison holds a Doctor's de-
his ~acation in Charleston, Ill., this old. gree from New York University and
August. Dr. Cottingham is a pro- is assistant professor of home ec-
fessor at Florida State University, Delbert Garland Birch, '36, onomics at Hunter College in New
•hassee. He has been in de- writes that he has a son, Gary Dean, York.
mand at other universities as a
9uest instructor and director of Among the wedding guests were
1Dunselling workshops. Mrs. Helen Rose Pegelow of Mat-
toon, former Teachers College
Florence Moyer Bubeck, '35, is Board member; Chenault Kelly, '25,
now language arts teachers in the a member of the Eastern English
Junid High School at Marshall, Ill. staff; Elwood Popham, '49, and
She took the position in September Mrs. Popham of Charleston; Edna
Abenbrink, (Mrs. Art Kresin), '39,
of 'this year. Tuscola; Mrs. Genevieve Lesemann
Eloise Austin (Mrs. Wayne A. Crouse, '39, Springfield; and Mrs.
Alice Cruse Crouch, '37, Shelby-
kresin), '35, writes that she has a ville.
llJghter, Jan, born February 5.
Elizabeth Navada Dickman (Mrs.
Leslie Cook, '23, '36, and Mrs. Elizabeth D. Barnard), '37, reports
the birth of a daughter, Ruth Anne,
Ccok are in England this fall, hav- on Aug. 22. Mrs. Barnard has two
other daughters, Edith Ellen, seven,
ing sailed on the Queen Mary Sep- and Mary, 4. Her new address is
6 Channing St., Newport, R. I.
Imber 9. Cook is on a Sabbatical
Edna Broyles, '37, is now teach-
leave from his work in the Chicago ing grades one, two, and three in
the Etna Grade School. Her address
lhcols for a year of travel in is 2003 Eleventh St., Charleston, Ill.

furope. . Joseph Russell Curry, '37, has a ·

Max White, '36, has left Keno-

sha, Wis., to take an elementary

.cipalship in a new consolidated
unit at Barrington, Ill. He and his

ly spent part of last summer

tioning in Florida.

Cecil Elam, '36, now lives at

2643 S. Sixty-first Ave., Chicago 50,

Ill. He continues to teach at Morton

amship High School and Junior

•lege in Cicero.
Hugh Harwood, '36, is recover-

!ng from an illness which kept him
~n the hospital for some time. He

is tales County states attorney and
~Ves at 846 Fourth St. in Charles-
ton.

PAGE SEVENTEEN

daughter, Marla Sue, born April 18. Teacher Shortage? Here's Answer
Mr. Curry is principal of the Win-
sor, Ill., High School.

Carl Clay Brant, '37, has resigned
his teaching position to take the job
as manager of the Edgar County
Locker Service.

Harry Lincoln Anderson, '37, is
now a teacher training specialist
for the Veterans Administration. He
is in the regional office in Chicago
covering profession, business sales,
and service occupation code for
disabled veterans.

William Raymond Abernathy, '37,
is now principal of the Washington,
Ill., High School. Mr. Aberbathy
was previously superintendent of
Fulton Co. Unit No. 3 at Cuba, Ill.
His address is 405 W. Jefferson St.,
Washington, Ill.

Bob Wright, '38, writes that Mrs. The Charles Frye family of Berwyn talks with Dr: William H. Zeig
Wright won first in the district and new placement officer at Eastern. Principal Frye was looking for teach
a letter of recognition in the state -and doing his part toward mitigating the teacher shortage by enrolli
Federated Woman's Club essay con- his daughter as a freshman. (See story.)
test this summer. The essay subject
was "A Hobby for Family Living." Helen Hoffman, '39, married Ar- ports spending a "most profita
The Wright hobby, which involves
Mr. and Mrs. Wright and their two thur Schottman last June 14. Mrs. summer" at the American Univ
sons, is magic. Working as a team,
they have entertained thousands of Schottman is a teacher in the Effing- sity, Washington, D. C. Miss Brait
people at clubs, conv~ntions,
schools, and churches. The Wrights ham, Ill., High School. Mr. Schott- waite teaches at the Centenn
live at Casey, Ill., where Bob is an
elementary school principal. man is associated with his family Junior High in Decatur.

Helen Lippincott Parsons (Mrs. in the Schottman Farm and Home Edwin Fryer, '39, now teach
Tom Cock), ex-'38, and her hus-
band own and operate "The Cot- Store of Effingham. music and directs band in I
tage," a cafe in Oblong. Mrs. Cook
has a second daughter, Shirley Ann, Mary Alice Harwood (M r s . Bridgeport Township High Sch
who was two in September.
Vaughn Armer), '39, is teaching a He formerly taught at Cisne.
Richard James Bromley, '38, re-
ports a new address, 1109 Lincoln rural school at Morrison, Ill., this Max W. Turner, '40, was nam
St., Superior, Wis.
year. Mr. Armer <;caches in the assistant to the Dean of the Coll
Wilba Luella Cribbit (Mrs. Doyle
Sisson), '38, recently moved from Morrison High School. Their ad- of Liberal. Arts and Science at Sou
Kewanee, Ill., to Pekin. Her hus- dress is 401 E. Wall St., Morrison. ern Illinois University, beginni
band will teach biology in the Pek- Mary Eileen Daugherty (Mrs. · in July. Turner has been teachi
in Community High School. The Marion Anderson), '39, is now · half-time in the department of go
Sissons live at 203 S. Ninth St., teaching el~mentary music in the ernment at Southern and servi
Pekin. Pana, Ill., Elementary School. Her as chief academic adviser in t
address is 1012 S. Poplar, Pana.
Ruby Ellen Bussy {Mrs. James D. LAS school.
Jones), '38, reports the birth of a
son, James Franklin. Mrs. Jones Garland Burcham Byran, '39, is Col. John W. Farrar, '40,
also has a daughter, Suzanne, two.
serving as navigator of an escort been named professor of air sc
Robert James Armstrong, '38,
has been selected to attend the Air aircraft carrier, the Salerno Bay. ence and tactics at Dartmouth C
University at Maxwell AFB in Ala.
He may be addressed as follows: Cmdr. Bryan may be addressed: lege, teaching ROTC units the
M/ Sgt. Robert James Armstrong
USAF, B36-6 Mobile Training De- USS Salerno Bay (CVE-110), Boston according to President J. Slo
tachment, Carswell AFB, Ft. Worth,
Tex . Naval Shipyard, Boston, Mass. He Dickey. Col. Farrar is now sent

expects to be transferred this win- pilot and chief of the Requirem

ter. Division at the Headquarters of t

Helen Lucina Borton (Mrs. Lowell Alaskan Air Command and Dep
E. Arnett), '39, writes that she will for Operations of the l Oth
be in Charleston to see some foot- Division. He expects to return t
ball games this fall. Her brother the continental U. S. in Novem
Gail is on the Panther team . She to take up his new duties.

lives in Pana, Ill., and teaches in Col. Farrar was pilot of a B-1

kindergarten. with the Eighth Air· Force durl"

Gussie Mae Braithwaite, '39, re- World War II and won awards

PAGE EIGHTEEN

...oism in bringing a shattered ies of eye operations to correct de- Recruiter

plane back to its base. fects on each eye.
Capt. Loren Jenne, '40, returned
, John Owen Harlan, '41, received

to his home in Sullivan, Ill., last tne Ed. D. at the University of Mis-

July after more than half a year of souri this summer. Dr. Harlan is a

service in Korea with the 45th In- professor of industrial arts at the

fantry Division Hq. and Hq. Co., Sta te CHoilslegedifsoser rTtaetaiocnhers~oBmupfafraelod
N. Y.
279 lnf. Rgt. Jenne vacationed with

his wife and family in Colorado scholastic records of students from

Springs after receiving his release academic, vocational, and technical

from iervice at Camp Carson. high school in the industrial arts

Lt. Col. Dean A. Fling, '40, and division of a teachers college. Dr.

his family were June visitors in Harlan spent some time with

1i als. Col. Fling is presently as- friends and relatives in Charleston

s gned to duty in Washington, during August.

o. c. R:ta Hanneken, '41, is employed

Virgil Judge, '40, is the new unit with the State Health Department

.intendent of schools at Mat- Springfield, Ill. '

toon, Ill., succeeding L. L. Krantz WGodrow Viseur, '41, has been

Es fall. Mr. Judge served for promoted to varsity basketball
veral years as county superin-
dent of schools in Edwards coach at Urbana High School. As

frosh-soph coach, he had but one

County and also as superintendent losing team at Urbana in six years.
of the E~w~rds County Community
Hayes Kennard, '41, left Cerro

ichool District No. l. He began his ~ordo, where he has taught for Ned Schrom, new director of ad-
missions at Eastern.
aching career i_n Edwards County five years, to take a position as ele-

• 1924 with only a high school mentary principal and coach in the

education. He took the Master's de- Danville, Ill., system. Kennard took Mary A. Kelly, '42, was married

gree at the University of Illinois in the M. A. at the University of Illi- last June 27 to Gorden 0. Brown

1948. According to the Albion nois in 1949. in Urbana, Ill., where he is em-

arnal-Register, Mr. Judge served Martha Jane Burkybile {Mrs. ployed as a chemist. Mrs. Brown re-
ceive~ t~e M. S. from the University
esident of practically every Harold Dean Williams), '4l 1 is now
living in Casey, Ill., where she and of Illinois last February and is now
nization in Albion except the
her husband own a 230 acre farm.
an's Club. working toward the doctorate. She
The Williams have two daughters,
Erma Mae Corman (Mrs. Ray- taught home economics at West- ·
Deanna, 7, and Donna, 8 months.
mcnd Devore), '40, started teaching ville for some years.
Martha Margaret Finley {Mrs.
in the Altamont, Ill., Elementary Thelma Drayton (Mrs. Frank
Ralph R. Wilson), '41, now lives in
School this fall. Fleming), '42, has been at 358 Le-
Arthur, 111. Her husband is superin-
l:arclyn Alta Brown (Mrs. James mur, San Antonio, Tex. She visited
tendent of the Arthur Unit Schools.
F. ISmith, Jr.), '40, has changed at her former home in Oblong, Ill.,
Walt Warmotli, ex-'39, '40, '41, last June. A son, James, is l V2 years
from teaching grade four to grade
etc., opened a new campus cafe on old. Mr. Fleming is a captain in the
three in the John Gill School in
the corner of Fourth and Grant
l w_ood Cit.y, Calif. _Her address Air Force.
1628 Whipple Ave., Redwood Streets this fall, just across from . Wendell Austin Blair, '42, of
·Paris, Ill., reports the birth of a
1ty. .J: the new residence halls. He issues

. Br.ce AndeN,''t40, is now liv- a welcome to Homecomers to visit daughter, Susan Powell, on June 7

ing in Lancaster, ··111. He is head of him October 16-18. The new build- 1953. ,
the re~t equipment department of
~ng provides a spacious public din- Marjorie Elizabeth Blackburn

the Petter and Brumfield Mfg. Co. ing room and a private banquet {Mrs. Orville M. Rice), '42, has a

of Princeton, Ind., one of the coun- room which can handle up to 75 so.n, Karl Marvin, born April 18 of
~ry's largest electrical relay manu-
persons. The second floor is divid- thrs year. Mrs. Rice may be ad-

.a urers. ed into apartments. . dressed at 407 Craine St., Flat
River, 'Mo.
,.,'.ldred Adkins (Mrs. Lawrence Wayne Saxton, '42, is command-

•~'hse nd esg)r,e e' 4 0f r,o mr e c e iIvneddi a nhae r Mas- er of the l 8th District of the Am- Agnes Irene Allison (Mrs. James
State
er~can Legion. Saxton lives near R. lewis), '42, is substitute teaching

llichers College in August. :cansas, Ill. in the Danville, Ill., Schools.

Delmar Nordquist, '42 received Eugenia Marie Allison, '42 is

Bob Mirus, '41, represents Mac- his Ph. D. degree in anthropology now living at 212 S. E. 2nd St: in
i\1urray College as an admissions Fairfield, 111.
at the University of Washington,
!nselor-this year, residing in Elk-.
art, Ind. He was formerly coadt' Seattle, last June. On July l he be-

;t the Mt. Carmel, Ill., High School. gan work at the American Swedish Mildred Alumbaugh (Mrs. Thom·
~mmy , infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
1vl1rus, has been undergoing a ser- Institute at Minneapolis, Minn., in as Vice), '42, now lives at 313 S.

the department of international re- Worth St., Sullivan, Ill.

lations. Estell Andrews (Mrs. Ralph

PAGE NINETEEN

White), '42r is teaching in the Before long Miss Kelley realized from paper-backed book bargai
Neoga Ill., Junior High School. that she had special talent and in- through imported Mexican fab

Doris Ruth Foster (Mrs. Jack W. formation that was prized by teach- dolls in gay costumes. She ha
Ulrey), '42, is living at 2412 S. ers all over the country. Today she made a successful effort at keepi
13th St., Broadview, Ill. advertises, from her home at 70l prices at a minimum and at stoc
Tennessee Street in Gary, Ind., a ing only materials that are genui
Donald Walter Davisson, '43, is "Picture Service and Teaching ly useful in the classroom.
now baseball and football line Aids" business. Her current cata-
coach at the High School in Collins- .Says Miss Kelley, "I was intere
vi Ile, 111. logue lists several hundreds of
items, ranging from inexpensive ed in art from the time I was in
Robert William Bokenkamp, '43, color prints and maps through large third grade . . . In college I 1rie-;i
is working toward a degree in arch- reproductions of famous paJntings,
itecture at the University of Illinois tc. make the most of all my oppoJI
while teaching half time. His ad- tunities and graduated with honoil
dress is 508 S. Fair St., Champaign,
Ill. The Bokenkamps have two sons, Ready for Centennial Pageant
Mark, l, and Steve, 4.

Dario Alessandro Covi, '43, is
working on his doctoral dissertation
at New York University. His ad-
dress is 236 E. 86th St., New York,
N. Y.

Nancy E. Moss (Mrs. Ned F. Van-
Voorhis), '43, is a new music teach-
er for the Tuscola, Ill., Schools. She
has taught at Areola, Springfield,
and Humboldt. Mr. Vanvoorhis is
a fireman and engineer with the
Illinois Central Railroad.

Margaret Ruth Guthrie (Mrs.
Charles Larson), '43, is deceased, ac-
cording to information received by
the Alumni Office.

Philip A. Gibson, ex-'43, plans
to drive from Washington, D. C. for
the Homecoming celebration. He
offers to bring with him any form-
er student of his area who may
wish to come. Gibson is associated
with the New York Life Insurance
Co. and occupies Suite 800, Shore-
ham Bldg., Washington 5, D. C.

Constance Bell (Mrs. John J. Jimmie Tedrick, '37 (right),
McCarthy), '44, and sons Dannie
sports a perimeter hairline for
and Johnnie embarked for England
in September to meet Major Mc- Casey, Ill., centennial, held in Au-
Carthy, who is legal officer at
Manston Air Force Base. His ad- gust and September. Tedrick is ath-
dress is Major John J. McCarthy,
Jr., Headquarters Flight 3917th Air letic director at Casey High, where

Base Group, APO 198, c/ o PM New Bob Tipsword, '48, is coaching the
York, N. Y.
football team to a very successful
Zelma Waneta Kelley, '3-?, '44, season. As of October 3, Casey had
has developed a teaching hobby not been scored upon.
into a l'lation-wide business.
In the above picture, the Eugene
Long a teacher in the Danville, Deverick family as they appeared
Ill., Schools, Miss Kelley always for the centennial celebration. Dev-
took pride in keeping her class- erick is also a Casey teacher and
rooms attractive, with interesting president of the Clark County East-
bulletin boards and colorful pic- ern State Club. This picture appear-
ed in metropolitan papers. L. to r.,
tures on the walls. Other teachers rear-Leland Leon, 17, Mrs. Rosalie
kept asking her: "Where do you Deverick, and Gene. Front-Donna
get these interesting things? I wish Jean, 16, and Judith Ann, 13.
I had a set of pictures like that."

PAGE TWENTY

When studying for an elemen- Returns to Eastern· Philip Gail Baird, '46, has a new
. · · ~ucation major, one must take street address: 324 N. Indiana St.,
Olney, Ill.
tarYe art and some industrial arts.
Anna Mae Cruise, '46, is teach·
'1l o yed those classes very much ing this year in the Beecher City,
The bulletin boards at Eastern Ill., High School. She was formerly
at Louisville, Ill.
:'i11w• tahYeS library and main hall were
so attractive that I worked Thomas Mac Newell, '46, is di-
rector of research for the Cardinal
!~rr8arcdtivdeto,,, make my classrooms at- Chemical Company of Odessa,
too ... That's where it all Texas. He visited the Eastern cam-
pus in September when returning
itar1e I from a meeting of the American
Chemical Society in Chicago. New-
l athryn Dively (Mrs. Robert F. ell was formerly with the Standard
rnan), '44, writes that her hus- Oil Company of Indiana. He is now
~d has taken a position in the a director and stockholder in Cardi-
nal Chemicals.
-hasset, Long Island, N. Y.,
Newell took the Master's degree
High School as teacher of chemis- in chemistry at the University of
Kentucky after leaving Eastern, at-
trY and general science, a position tending on a fellowship. He later
attended the University of Tulsa,
ith excellent opportunities fo,r ad- taking another Master's degree, thi~
time in business management.
ement. He will also sponsor a
Newell and his wife and three
ography club. Mr. Seaman has children live in Odessa, a rapidly
growing city in the west Texas oil
assistant principal at the Uni- fields.

versity High School, Urbana, and Gerald Chestnut, '47, superin-
tendent of schools in Oregon, Ill.,
acher of chemistry and physics. received his M. S. at the University
In ~ddition, he h?IS completed of Illinois last year. His P. 0 . box
number is l 06.
aurse work for the doctoral de-
Naida Rae Bush (Mrs. Donald
ee. Mrs. Seaman has worked in Sarah Fredenberger, '46, new Lee High)), '47, is doing part-time
teaching in the Ridgefarm, Ill.,
e office of one of the University Schools.

hologists the past year. The sixth grade teacher in the element- John Stabler, '47, formerly at St.
Anne High School, is coaching foot-
ans may be addressed c/o ary laboratory school. ball this year at Paris, Ill., High
School.
l,isan Crain, 168 Lindbergh St.,
Tom Young, '47, who has c~ach­
ltihasset, Long Island, N. Y. at the University of Richmond, ed all sports at Armstrong since
Richmond, Va. 1949, is the new basketball coach
Jay L. Logue, '44, is back in Illi- at Monticello High School, succeed-
nois this year after a period in Wilma Jean Dailey (Mrs. George ing Don Wilt. Young will also teach
florida, teaching printing ip the Tade), '45, is the wife of the newly bookkeeping. He holds the Mas-
axana High School. Logue lives at appointed acting dean of men at ter's degree from the University of
142 W. Tydeman, Roxana. Greenville College, Greenville, Ill. Illinois. Young is married and has
two sons.
Philip W. Smith, '44, writes to Mr. Tade joined the Greenville Col-
Richard R. Connolley, '47, mar-
aiake a slight correction in a June lege seven years ago. He is also ried Roberta M. Holtzman in June.
Mrs. Connolley has taught for two
•umnus item. "Instead of being re- head of the speech department. years at Elgin, Ill. Mr. Connolley is
now assistant principal and athletic
ceo1 ly recalled to military duty," Clem Hanneken, '45, is teaching director of the Burlington and
Plato Center, Ill., High School.
he says, "I returned to my civilian. mathematics at Marquette Univer-
Cloyce L. Hunt, '47, became sup-
job in May as a pilot with Delta-C sity, Milwaukee, this fall. Hann~­ ervisor of industrial arts and voca-
tional education for the new school
&S Air Lines here in Miami and the ken received the Ph. D. at the Uni- at North Chicago this fall. Hunt has
been at Mt. Vernon for some years.
•dress is once again 770 Plover versity of Illinois in 1952 and spent
PAGE TWENTY-ONE
Ave., Miami Springs, Fla., as re- one year of teaching at the Jesuit

arted in the Alumnus." Smith adds Seminary, St. Louis.

• t at present he is flying to Chi- ' Louise Mae Homann (Mrs. How·
cago and frequently has another ard E. Ogden), '45, is teaching
•tern alumnus as stewardess. home economics at the Lexington,
She is Pat Brotherton, '51, a Delta Ill., High School this year. She
Sig sorority sister of Mrs. Smith, \ taught at Towanda for a year and
formerly Jane Everhart. (For more a half.
•cent news of Miss Brotherton, Helen L. Henry, '45, completed
see Class of '51 items.)
work for the Master's degree at

Mary Marjorie Ashby, '44, re- Columbia University this summer.

PClrts a new address: l 06 S. Fauth She is teaching in the Jefferson

St., Champaign, Ill. She is teaching Park School, Tucson, Ariz., this year

business education at the Univer- after several years at the Fairchild

lity of Illinois. School in Danville, Ill.

Delbert Ferrel Atkins, '45, writes Eleanor Joan Brannah, '46, now
"1at he did work as a ranger at the lives at 623 Freemont St., Belvi-
ocky Mountain National Park this dere, Ill., and teaches English in
lmmer. Dr. Atkins teaches math the High School there.

Doris Cihak (Mrs. Paul Sphar), Institute of Technology, Monterrey, completed most of the work
'47, writes that she and her hus- Mexico, for the summer. ward the Master's degree at Eas•
band completed their tour of the ern.
48 states this summer. This year's Dick Handwerk, '48, is working
· trip included Washington, D. C., for an accounting firm at Orlando, Ray Miller, '48, is coaching at Al.
Canada, and Old Mexico. "The trip Fla., and lives at 1504 Lucerne Ter- bion High School this year after a
had only one disappointment," she race. successful two 'year term at Sum-
says. "We didn't meet even one ner, where he produced the besl
Eastern graduate, as we usually John L. Roberts, '48, is taking ad- teams the school has had in 14
d~.~·- Mrs. Sphar adds the she learn- vanced work at the University of years.
Iowa, Iowa City, this year. He has
ed from the last Alumnus that one been teaching in Memphis, Tenn. Joe Walton, '48, is the new coacl
at DePue, Ill., High School. He
of her former teachers attended Dean Warner, '48, received a taught last at Lake Forest. This sunj
Eastern-Ernest Pricco was her sev- master of science degree from mer he married Mrs. Barbara Brevl
enth and eighth grade teacher. Bradley University in June. He er Jones of Mattoon.
i.s teaching industrial arts at Madi- · Betty Carmichael (Mrs. Bill MoiM
Miles Culver, '47, left his posi- son, Ill., where he has been since ier), '48, is again teaching in
tion in the Mattoon, Ill., Schools this 1943. Mattoon, Ill., High School, handli
August to become band director of business subjects and girls' ph
the Almagordo, N. M., Schools. Mr. Herbert J. Lee, '48, left Casey cal education.
Culver spent the summer working High School this fall after three
toward the Master's degree at East- years there to serve as director of Maurice Wilson, '37, '48, wko
ern. Mrs. Culver, the former Mil- music in the Taylorville, Ill., Unit has for nine years been a teachi
dred Olmstead, '47, had charge of Schools. Mr. Lee married Mrs. Vir- principal at Vandalia, is filling a
the Andrews Music Listening Room ginia Horning of Casey last August. newly created half-time princi
The newlyweds' young daughters,
for the summer term. Sandra Horning and Diane Lee, ship at the Hays School in Urba
Robert Waddell, '47, is on leave were ring bearers at the wedding. this year. Last year Everett L.
Lee's first wife died in the tragic Clinard, '38, was principal of thd
from his position in the physics de- Effingham Hospital fire several Hays, Washington, and Perkiil
partment at Eastern this year to years ago. Schools in Urbana. This year he
work toward the Doctor's degree. will head only two schools. Wil
George Robert Miller, '48, is son took the M. A. in education last
Russell Pierson, '47, entered of-· teaching industrial arts in the Tay- summer at the University of lllinoil
ficers' training in the Air Force lorville, Ill., Schools this year. He
school at Yale University in June. has taught general shop at Catlin, Burk Emil Beerli, '48, reports th4
He was inducted in January and Ill. for the past two years. birth of a .daughter, Pamela Ellen
had been stationed at Boca Raton, on February l 0. . .
Charles E. Moore, '48, is teach-
Fla. ing commercial subjects at the Merrit J. Fuson, '48, writes that
Flora, Ill., High School. Moore has his only son is in the Air Force in
Verna Lowry, (Mrs. Felix Juska),
'47, is at Michigan State College Coathangers Became Mobiles
this year as assistant teacher in the
home economics education depart-
ment. Mrs. Juska taught in Fre-
mont and Park River-Harris Schools
in Michigan and served as a hospi-
tal dietition in Escanaba and Lans-
ing. She will complete work for the
Master's this year. Her husband is
completing his Doctor's degree at
Michigan State also. The Juskas
now live at 706 Birch Rd., M.S.C.,
East Lansing.

Herschel McPheron, '47, is the
new agriculture teacher at the
Georgetown, Ill., High School. He
holds the Master's degree in agri-
culture from the University of llli-

Richard Wayne Falley, '48, has An arts and crafts workshop attracted the maximum number of a
a son, Rodger Wayne, born Aug. rolees on the Eastern campus this summer. Here they learn to use scr'
28. The Falleys live at 704V2 S.
Carroll, Freeport, Ill. materials in making all kinds of art objects.

Ra·bert Lee Ankenbrandt, '48, at-
tended the summer session at In-
diana University. He is teaching in
Robinson, Ill. Last year he took the
M. S. at the University of Kentucky
and received a scholarship to the

PAGE TWENTY-TWO

London, Eng. Mr. Fuson's address is New ESHS Teacher Leslie Barnhart, '49, now lives in
Robinson, Ill., where he is employ-
464 W. Waggoner St., Decatur, Ill. Dr. Don Tingley, '47, new East- ed with an oil company.
0 Edward Bryant, '48, is now ern State High sbeial studies teach-
er. James W. Holaday, '49, and Flor-
esentative with Scott Fores- ence Antoinette Kreman of Chicago
former Berniece Fuller and has a Heights were married in Sullivan
arri~nera·nsdomCeo. He writes that he will five-month-old daughter. last August. Mr. and Mrs. Holaday
38 counties i_n central both teach in Sullivan, Ill.
Perry Whitson, '49, is the new
riinois and see many of his Eastern high school music director and Helen Harshbarger (Mrs. Allen),
grade school instrument director at '49, is teaching business at the Tay-
fr ends. Pana, Ill. Whitson has taught two lorville, Ill., High School this year.
years at Villa · Grove and two at She taught for four years at Som-
Francis Edward Bailey, '48, re- Capron, northeast of Rockford. The onauk.
~rts the birth of a daughter, Mary Whitsons have a daughter, 5, and
a son, 4. Perry took advanced work Sam Morehead, '49, left · the
IJanne, on April 22. Mr. Bailey as Eastern during the summer ses- Fennville, Mich., school system this
sions. year to teach mathematics in the
~rivleles, at 3920 N. Belt West, Bell- junior high school at Taylorville,
Ill. He is with the Standard John R. Coil, '49, is teaching 111. The Moreheads Iive on Ash
business education at Elgin, Ill., Street in Taylorville.
Oil Co. High School. He has taught in the
Robert Daniel Bond, '48, is now Army, at Mcleansboro, and at Van- James (Jay) Knott, '49, has been
rmacist in a Yokohoma hospi- dalia. appointed business education in-
Japan. Mr. Bond entered the structor at Southern Illinois Univer-
Elmo Hilderbraod, '49, is the sity. Both Mr. and Mrs. Knott (the
ArrnY in July of 1952. new athletic director at Petersburg, former Delores Krick), '49, have
June Eloise Bubeck (Mrs. James Ill., High School. Hilderbrand pro- taught at Lawrenceville High School
duced an outstanding basketball for the past four years.
Giffin), '48, has returned to Char- team at Louisville, Ill., High School
leston following her husband's l~st year. Don Woodard, '49, replaces
comple ion of the Ph. D. at North- Charles E. Anderson, '49, as basket-
lrtestern University·: She taught Charles Clark, '49, who is in the ball coach and assistant principal at
grade five in a Wilmette school last St. John's Sanitorium, Springfield, Bement High School this year. An-
Ill., expects to be well enough to derson moved to California early in
year. leave the hospital next spring. A August. Woodard coached DePue
Ens. Charles Eugene Buzzard, '48, tuberculosis patient, Clark recently to the sectional finals lc;ist year be-
submitted to a chest operation fore losing to LaSalle-Peru. ·He first
is now an assistant personnel of- which has speeded his recovery. coached at Carlyle. He took the
ficer and photo interpreter with the Mrs. Clark is the former Barbara Master's degree at the University of
Navy. He returned from Korea and Heise, '50. Illinois this summer.
~n in August. His address is
•cRON 3, NAS, San Diego, Calif. Don Johnson, '49, All-Confer- John Barrett, '49, of Laullen and
ence back on Eastern's title-winning Barrett Accounting and Business
Ray Miller, '48, is coaching at the grid team in 1948, is now head Service, Vandalia, reports that he
football coach at the Taylorville, and Mrs. Barrett have a small place
West Salem, Ill., Senior High Ill., High School. about four miles from downtown.
"It is a two acre plot," he states
5chool. Miller went to West Salem "and at last count was occupied by
four Barretts, four cats, two rab-
from Sumner. bits, 30 chickens, and an unde-
Philip W. Smith, ex-'48, received termined number of army worms.''

the Ph. D. degree in zoology last Rush Darigan, '49, moved recent·
June at the University of Illinois. ly to Elgin, Ill., where he represents
Dr. Smith is now on the pe.rmanent the Scott Foresman Co., educa-
staff of the Illinois Natural History tional publishers. Mrs. Darigan is
Survey. the former Betty Elliott, '47.

Gerald Dart, who finished the Don Musselman, '49, is teaching
English this year at the Lyons Town-
. .veterinary program at Eastern ship High School, LaGrang~. Mus-
selman holds the M. A. from the
in 1948, was graduated from the University of Chicago. Mrs. Mussel-
man is the former Dories Hefley.
•rinarian school of the college of The Musselmans have two children.

grlculture at the University of Illi- Freda Lou Roberts (Mrs. Lyle R.
Beals), '49, is planning to do substi-
nois in June and joined the asso- tute teaching in Mattoon High
School this year.
detion of Dr. B. L. Strohl and Dr.
Delmar Keith Biggs, '49, writes
R. L. Jaylor at Paris, Ill., in July. Dr.

Dart lives at 614 Vance with his

Wife and three children. .

Donald Lee Pyle, '49, is now

l ching commercial subjects at
Hillsboro Community High
hool. Pyle was principal of the
~ bourne High School last year.
He has done graduate work at the
Ur11vers1ty of Illinois.

Frank Walters, '49, is teaching
SH~cial science in the Hillsboro, Ill.,
. igh School this year after a per-
iod at Panama. He will also assist
With football. Walters married the

PAGE TWENTY-THREE

New Superintendent George M. Reat, '49, is superin- N.' D. He and Mrs. Garner, th~
tendent of the Central Public former Almeta Greathouse, '52
Harrison Brown, '50, '53. Schools in Burlington, Ill. have a son, Thomas Alan, born lasl
(See page 29) Dec. 18. The Garners Iive at 817
Vance Kercheval, '50, is teaching
that he has just moved from Pana, intrumental music at Cisne, Ill., Seventeenth St., Bismark.
Ill. He will be a manager trainee High School. He has begun his Mary Jo Maisch, '50, is teacning
for the J. C. Penney Co., in Coving- work toward the M. S. at Eastern.
ton, Ky. His address is 2114 East- this year in the kindergarten at
ern Ave., Covington. Don Davis, '50, who has been at Venice, Ill. She holds the Maste
Spring Valley, began work this fall degree from the University of llli~
Charles Lamar Brown, '49, may as assistant coach and industrial nois. last year she was employ
now be addressed at 1068 W. arts teacher at Areola High School. as a teacher at the Lincoln, I
Cerro Gordo St., Decatur, Ill., where
he is an assistant sales manager tl.rthur Aikman, '50, resigned school and colony.
with the Standard Oil Company. from his duties at the Buckley-Lada Mary Lou1se Humes, '50,
Community Unit Schools to accept
Phillip Edward Ayers, '49, re- the Onarga Grade School principal- teaching English at the Taylorvil
ceived the M. A. degree from ship this fall. Don Williams, a form- 111., High School this year. She ha
George Peabody College this sum- er Eastern student, succeeded Aik- taught for the pa.sf three years at
mer. man at Loda. Gibson City, Ill. She has tak
graduate work at the University
Charles Albert Bunten, '49, is Carol Carruthers, '50, was · mar- Illinois and at Western Illinois St
doing graduate study for the Doc- ried in June to John T. Myers, a College.
tor's· degree in industrial education former Eastern student who finish-
at the University of Missouri. His ed his work at the University of Frank Casino, '50 succeed
address is 35 "O" St., Columbia, Illinois in 1951. The Myerses took Darrell Biggs, '50, as teacher of io-
Mo. a wedding trip to Belgium, France, dustrial arts at the Manteno, Ill
and Switzerland. They now reside High School this year. Casino ha•
Carl W. Cohoon, '49, is principal in Covington, Ind., where Mr. taught industrial arts at Hull Hou
of the Wyanet Community High Myers is associated with the Foun- in Chicago for two years while liv
School. He was vocational educa- tain Trust Company. ing at Bradley.
tion supervisor in the Lincoln, Ill.,
school system before going to Robert Alexander, '50, coach as Pvt. James M. Rominger, '50
Wyanet. Mascoutah, Ill., for three years, has joined the Far East Command Signa
become coach in the New Baden Service Battalion in Japan in July
Donald E. Cohoon, '49, is now grades and high school this year. His unit, stationed at Camp Tokyo,
teaching commerce in the Hills- maintains a communications syst
boro· Community High School. Howard Boudreau, '50, is the that links every U. S. military
Cohoon formerly taught in the At- new football coach and industrial stallation in the world. Ramin
~anta, Ill., High School. arts teachers at Wyoming Commun- attended the University of
· Fred A. Pilger, '49, received the ity High School. Boudreau quarter- Mexico on a graduate assistants
M. S. in Ed. degree from James backed Eastern's conference cham- after graduating at Eastern.
Millikin University in August. Pil- pions in 1948.
ger is teaching mathematics in the Denver J. Leturno, '50, is tea
Melvin, Ill., High School. Jack F. Zimmerman, '50, has left ing science at the Elgin, Ill., Hi
a position as private secretary to School this year. He has been tea
the vice president of the Illinois ing at Taylorville.
Central Railroad in Chicago to teach
business subjects at the Hillsboro, Virgil Sweet, '50, and Paral
Ill., High School. '(oung were married last July.
Sweet continues to coach at W
Kenneth G. Knop, '50, married ville, Ill., High School. The newl
Grace Spannagel of Strasburg last
June. Knop teaches and coaches at weds make their home at
the Stewardson-Strasburg Junior Juliana Dr., Danville.
High. Mrs. Knop is employed as a
stenographer at Wolf's Appliance Vernon Vaughn Drake, '50,
Store in Mattoon. The newlyweds now with the Carter Oil Co. in M
live in Strasburg. toon, 111. He may be addresse•
503 S. l 3th St., Mattoon, or P.
Don Brauer, '50, is setting up a Box 72, Carmi, Ill.
new industrial arts department in
the Altamont High School and Frank Floski, Jr., '50, is no
teaching four industrial arts classes. teaching in the Marshall, Ill., Co
Upon completion of his tour of munity Unit. His address is 114
Army duty, Brauer taught in the Mt. 3rd St., Marshall.
Olive High School for a year.
Charles lynn Arnold, '50, repO
Bob Garner, '50, is a geophysi- a new address. MCRD, Par
cist for the California Oil Company Island, S. C. Mr. Arnold is a cha
(a division of Standard) in Bismark, lain in the Navy.

James Harris Bone, '50, is do
graduate work at Colorado Sta
College of Education, Gree
Colo. His address is 614 17th St.

PAGE TWENTY-FOUR

lrnest Raymond Cole, '50, was quartet rated No. 2 in the Air He is at home with D. A. Rothschild
.,rr1ed to Miss Donna Baker of St. Force at a contest held at Selfridge of Eastern at present.
us, Mo., on Sept. 13. AFB in Michigan. Airman First Class
Bill Ray Crum, '50, has been with Haney sings baritone in "The Park- LeRoy Greathouse, '51, is the
~e trmy in Korea since January, aires." The Michigan tourney new mathematics and industrial
1,,d was in combat till the truce. brought singing groups from Air arts instructor in the junior high
8 n e then he has been in charge Force bases throughout the world. and high schools of Sycamore, Ill.
f eation for his group. He ex- It was .won by "The Rip Chords" He taught two years at Rosiclare,
from Francis E. Warren AFB, Wyo. 111.
o Is to be home in December. Mr. Haney was band director at Fair-
f ield before entering service. Donald Dean Smith, '51, and
~rn 's address is: Sgt. Billy R. Mary Lee Wilson, '52, are married
v'l' U. S. 55256017, Hq. Co. 3 Numan Bt>ne, '51, is teaching in and living at 302 West Hill, Cham-
the Sihler School at Litchfield, af- paign, Ill.
rd 13tn, 3lst lnf. Regt., APO 7, c/o ter a year at Albion. He took the
Master's degree at the University Bill Brewer, '51, was released in
M , San Francisco, Cal if. of Illinois in 1952. September from active service in
lames Daniel Boone, '50, now the Air Force shortly after graduat-
0 hes bsketball and football and Ed Sorgel, '51, is playing quar- ing from OCS at Lackland, Tex., as
aches science at Bismark, Ill. terback with the Camp Atterbury, a result of the Air Force budget
thester Ray Leathers, '50, was Ind., Army football team this fall. cut. His address is Louisville, Ill.
entl y married to Miss Sylvia Soergel played professional ball in At Lackland he met Shirley Fisher,
.ird yn Clark of Roanoke, Va. Canada prior to his induction last Bob Rehbein, Carl Morgan, and
winter. Dick Fiscus, all Eastern students.
Mr. leathers is a teaching fellow at
the tniversity of Michigan, where Larry Mizener, '51, is the father 2nd Lt. Shirley Fisher, '51, who
of Debra Jean, born July 9. Mrs. .taught a year at Potomac, Ill., is
he is completing work on the Ph. Mizener is the former Jean Carr, now at Lowry Field, Denver, attend-
a former student. Larry operates ing an Air Force Intelligence school.
o. legree. the Ko-op near the Eastern campus. She was among the "Distinguished
Graduates" of the Air Force
l llip Settle, '50, ls teaching art Marjorie Waddell, '51, was mar- school at Lackland, Tex., in June.
ried to Sgt. William A. Helgemo Miss Fisher has three more years of
in Champaign, Ill., Junior High last June 6. At the time Mr. Hel- servire with the Air Force.
Sc I. Settle taught in Robinson, gemo was stationed at Barksdale
AFB, Shreveport, La. Mrs. Helgemo Robert Rehbein, '51, a member
111., last year. is still employed at the Carter Oil of the same graduating class at the
k;lenda Stombaugh, '50, teaches Company offices in Mattoon, where Lackland, Tex., Air Force school as
rls' physical education in the her address is 1501 Y2 Edgar Ave. Shirley Fisher, is now at Keesler

Pana, Ill., High School. Max Syfert, '51, was recently re- Replaces Edwards
Dick Thomas, ex-'50, took a posi- leased from service and expects to
study at the University of Illinois. Dr. William B. Knox, new ele-
tion with the reportorial staff of mentary laboratory ·school princi-
the rhoenix, Ariz.', Gazette this Joe Ewing, '51, is teaching grade
.ember. Thomas, a graduate of six in the Brookwood Elementary pal. Dr. 'A. U. Edwards is now
the Medill School of Journalism at School, Glenwood, Ill. He has
taught at Overland, Mo., during teaching full time in the college
hwestern, worked on the Mat-
toon Journal-Gazette staff for some the past four years. education department.. "":
rears. Mrs. Thomas, the former Barbara Keen (Mrs. Harry Zim-
lvth St. Jchn, '49, taught at Shelby- PAGE TWENTY-FIVE
ville High School. The Thomases mack), '51, writes that she plans to
now live at 206 E. Clarendon, return to Eastern for the Oct. 17
Homecoming celebration. Barbara
oen 1x. and Harry live at 748 Pammel
Court, Ames, la.
9eanne Root (Mrs. John Miller),
'51, is teaching in a Tuscola ele- Carolyn Petty (Mrs. C. J. Doane),
rr.entary school this year. She '51, is speech correctionist for the
itght two years in Arthur High Steward, Ill., schools this year. She
taught at Hoopeston last year. C. J.
oo l. Tuscola is her home town. is teaching social science and coach-
Mrs. Miller has had additional'work ing in the Steward High School.
at Bail State Teachers, Muncie, Ind. The Doanes are residing in Ste-
ward, which is near Rochelle.
Jack Whitson, '51, has resigned
nior high school coach in the Sam Bliss, '51, is the new senior
leston, Ill., Schools to · sell for vice commander of the Luther B.
Easley Post of the American Legion
e Jefferson National Life Insur- at Salem, Ill.
ance Company of Indianapolis. He
'Ne ds to continue to make his Sgt. Don Rothschild, '51, was re-
hcme in Charleston. Whitson, a leased from service in early Sep-
1 rner American Association l;>ase- tember after 14 months in Korea.
ball player who starred for four

re rs at Eastern, originated Char-

-~1on's Little League baseball pro-

lram this summer.

Gene Haney, '51, was a member
of the Parks, Calif., Air Force Base

Roomful of Recruits ried to Thomas E. Clements. S
is music director at the Wellingt
Five hundred eight freshmen are among this group of students Ill., High School. Mr. Clement• i
hearing orientation lectures in early September. It is the largest incoming in the Army.
class in several years. Total enrollment hit 1221 by October l, an increase
of about seven per cent over last year. J).aron Gray, '51, was dischar
from the Marine Corps in Aug
Field, Biloxi, Miss., in electronics . .. and is now employed as a spe
corrcctionist with the Mattoon, Ill
training. ty. The newlyweds will reside in Schools. Mrs. Gray has taught s
Pat Brotherton, '51, married Phil Morris, Ill. Mrs. Brosman taught end grade at the Hawthorne Scho
home economics and physical edu- for two years. The Grays live
Bowman, a former student, ir;i Set- cation at Melvin for two years fol- 2205 Prairie in Mattoon.
tember. They took a honeymoon lowing her graduation at Eastern.
trip to Jamaica. Mr. Bowman is re- James Kenneth Grubb, '5
Lou1se Delap, '51, who has teaches seventh grade at the Clift
portedly attending college in Cali- taught fourth grade at Hillsboro, Attendance.Center •in Kankak
fornia. took a position in the Springfield, Ill. Grubb will also coach and su
Ill., Sch::iols beginning this fall. Her ervise the athletic program of t
A/2c Duane Bruce, '51, has been home address is 800 S. Walnut, school.
serving as a rawindsonde operator Springfield.
at Thule Air Base, Greenland. His Lola Olds, '51, was married t
address is A/2c Duane Bruce AF Neva Buckley, '51, left her posi- James Lukens of Decatur, Ill., i
173191 70, 8-24 Wea. Det., APO tion at Palestine this fall to teach ceremonies in Chula Vista, Calif
23 c/o PM, New York, N. Y. at Grant Park, Ill., where she will recently.

Don Sunderland, '51, is a math be music director for the Grant Pamela Ames (Mrs. Ray Jenki
teacher in the new Urbana, Ill., Park schools. She was a music '51, now teaches in grade five
Junior High School this year. He counselor in the Lake of the Woods White Heath Grade School in Mo
was released from military service Camp, Decatur, Mich., this sum- ticello, Ill.
last April. mer.
Kenneth Wilson, '51, was ma
Joan Madden, .'51, is taking a Joanne Waddell, '51, married ried to Miss Betty Wolter of Ttc
year's leave of absence from her Gene W. Gsell June 14. At the 0., in ceremonies at the First Pr
secretarial position in the Dean's byterian church at Bellville, Ill., A
office at Eastern to study at North- time of the wedding Mrs. Gsell ex- gust 3.
western University. She will teach pected to resume her duties as sec-
there part-time while taking educa- ond grade teacher in Mattoon this Shirley Slingerland, '51, w
tion courses with business empha- fall. Mr. Gsell is an aviation cadet married to Harold Muchow in cer
sis. Her address is 1914 Orrignton, and was transferred to Randolph monies at Altamont, Ill., last so
Evanston. AFB in Texas in July. mer. Mrs. Muchow teaches in I
Altamont, Ill., High School.
Anna Carolyn Neal, '51, who has Merton Johnson, '51, will teach
taught English and Spanish at instrumental music at the Centen- Joe Patridge, '52, is back ho
Neoga High School the past two nial School in Decatur this year.
years, is teaching the same subjects Johnson has taught at Areola since in Areola this fall aft~r resig
it·1 the Mount Pulaski High School 1951. as assistant coach at Paris
this year. School. He expects to enter
Richard Eugene Adair, '51, is Army shortly after Homeco
Barbara Honnold, '51, of Kansas tea.ching at Witt, Ill. at Eastern.
became the bride of Jerrell Bros-
man last June 20. Mr. Brosman is John Howard Bell, '51, is now Peggy Fellis (Mrs. Dale Wi
a conservation aid in Grundy Coun- with the Army in Germany. He ex- ler), '52, and Mr. Wingler, '37, b
pects to be home in December. now teach English in the Muske
Mich., school system.
Jane Louise Baker, '51, is mar-
Mary Louise Piper, '52, tau
fifth and sixth grades last ye .
the Navajo Indian Methodist
sion at Farmington, N. M., and
pects to return to the same po5Hi
this year.

Melba Strange, '52, is teac
general science at West Junior Hi
in Kankakee, Ill. She taught
year at Pleasant Hill Junior Hi
Springfield.

Andrew J. Cain, '52, is reach
in the elementary schools of Ca
after a year at Sheldon, Ill.

Bobby Keith Cox, '52, a
Jeanne Barth, '51, were rrnH
last May 30. Mrs. Cox forrP

PAGE TWENTY-SIX

ht in the Sullivan, Ill., Schools. Back Home · 25. A former student, Mrs. Parker
has been employed in the medical
tAearo'-;x'9~rhicaaista been Msytaetri,onvead. with the Merve Baker, '40, moved from department of the Franklin Insur-
Fort Dupo to Charleston High School ance Co., Springfield. At the time
Vowels, '52, and Lt. this fall. A four-sport star at East- of the wedding, Mr. Parker was
Lee ern, Baker has an outstanding stationed at Augusta, Ga., as an in-
coaching record. structor in the Signal Corps. After
,A.rth•u. rd E·laSstmiJtuhl'y Jr., USAF, were Oct. 1, the young couple expected
18. Smith is a ---~------------- to be at home in Augusta.

dd'I-~aarrpieoatleis.of Butler University, basketball coach in the new Aller- Eugene Mazonne, '52, has been
At the t.ime of the ton, Broadlands, Longview Com- teaching in the Manatee County
munity Unit High School. Schools, Fla., and living at Braden-
I in Edwardsville, Ill., he ton. He married Betty Blair of North
Ruth Caroline Bingham, '52, is Muskegon, Mich., in August.
- tioned at Chanute Field, married to William E. Simmons. Mr.
Simmons is in the Marine Corps. Ray Snyder, '52, is teaching Eng-
cRwra1afnsft'oRula·onttThohueCl,aarIsdllo.dnr,es's5:2 1 114 Briar- Mrs. Simmons lives at 315 Pear St., lish and social science in the Jef-
, teaches in Mt. Carmel, Ill. ferson Junior High School, Char-
leston, Ill. He is living with his
ary grades at Elgin, 111. Marvin Wayne Bennet, '52, re- brother, Joe, at l 027 Seventh St.
ports the birth of a son, Jeffrey
y Coleman, '52, was mar- Glen, on Aug. 12. Mr. Bennett William B. Moody, '52, has a son,
teaches at the Bone Gap, Ill., Junior Jeffrey Howard, born Aug. 15.
. Paul Burnett recently. The High School. Mrs. Moody is the former Eleanor
Schwartz, ex-'53. The Moodys live
ri uple is living in Mattoon. frank Fraembs, '52, writes from at 547 A. Main St., Shrewsbury,
Korea that he is in touch with Lynn Mass.
co Marilyn Zimmerman, '52, w?s Swango, '52, who is also with the
l 80th Infantry Regiment in Korea. Justin A. lsert, '52, took the Mas-
rried to James A. Herman in Fraembs is a security guard assign- ter's degree at Ohio State Univer-
ed to protect regimental headquar- sity Aug. 28.
Smonies at Litchfield, 111., recent- ters and the commanding colonel.
Since the cease fire, he says, it's a Marvin Bennett, '52, is father of
'-•ymond L. Biggs, '52, has just rather unexciting job. As of early a son born Aug. 12. He is named
~leted work. and ~~ceived the September, Fraembs' address was Jeffry Lynn.
degree o~ M. ~- in. Ed. from South- P.F.C. Frank A. Fraembs, US55300-
l 32, Hq. Co., l 80th lnf. Regt., Wilmoth Carson, '52, is teaching
ern lllinors University. 86, c/o PM San Francisco, Calif. third grade at the Washington
School in Elgin this year. She last
Earl Lee Brackenbush, '52, is Olen Brown, '52, is now teaching taught in Mattoon.
at Capron, Ill. He was at Oakland
ing as an oral hygienist at last year. · Gail Peters, '52, joined the Rock
Falls, Ill., Elemenary School staff
• al Clinic No. 3 at Fort Leonard Dale Stretch, '52, married Janean this fall after teaching one year in
Wood, Mo. He may be addressed Miller in July. Mr. Stretch is in ser- the sixth grade at Crete-Monee
vice and was . stationed at Ft. Grade School.
1b1u5 sfho,lluo.w5s.: Cpl. Earl Lee Brecken- Leonard Wood at th~ time of the
Army Dental Unit, 5017 wedding. Dorothy LaMaster (Mrs. John
Greathouse), '52, is teaching at the
ASU, Ft. leonard Wood, Mo. Richard Parker, '52, married Pa-
tricia McCarthy of Springfield, July Longfellow Junior High in Mat-
Gerald William Ferguson, '52, is toon, Ill. She taught at Oakwood
High School last year. John is an
now with the Army in the Far East accountant for an insurance firm in
Mattoon.
Command. He may be addressed as
Thomas Thode, '52, reported in
follows: Pfc. Gerald William Fergu- July to the Naval Post-Graduate
School, Monerey, Calif., for forty
son U.S. 55256088, Co. B 84th weeks of schooling in aerology. He
received a commission as ensign,
onse. en., APO 30 l, c/ o Postmas- USNR, on July l after completing
four months of OCS training at
ter, San francisco, Calif. Newport, R.I.

Wilford Maurice Ashley, '52, is Caroline Porter, '52, and Jim
Canny, Methodist minister at Aller-
now a student at the Missouri ton, Ill., were married August 8.

School of Mines in Rolla, Mo. Norma Metter, '52, is teaching
at Princeton, Ill., High School after
William Emmett Balch, Jr., '52, a summer spent working in Cali-
fornia. She took the Master's de-
received the M. S. degree in physi- gree at the University of Illinois
cal ~ucation from the University last spring.

of Illinois this summer. Mr. Balch

now teaches at Byron, Ill.

Nancy Baird (Mrs. James Garner),

'52, reports the birth of a daughter,
Nancy ~athryn. Mr. Garner has

been released from the Air Force

an.lans to attend the University

of issouri. Mrs. Garner plans to

teach in tolumbia, Mo.

. Neva ay Buckley, '52, is teach-

ing mus in the elementary and

high school at Grant Park, Ill.

l ralyn Davis, '52, is teaching
making at the Moweaqua,
igh School. She plans to marry
. arles Gregory. The wedding date
is set for October 4. .

Jack Dwain Frost, '52, reports

that he is now head football and

PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN

Alva White Harrison, '53, is ed Eastern last year. Mr. Lynch is Carol Wolven, '53, and P 1.1
teaching in the Abbott Junior High teaching in the Somonauk, Ill., High Rittmanic, a former student w
School at Elgin, Ill. His address is School, where the newlyweds have took the B. A. at the Universirj 0~
146 S. State St. an apartment. Illinois and the Master's degre~ at
Northwestern, were married
Marilyn Huisinga, '53, is teach- Marie Cerven, '·53, and Donald August. Mr. Rittmanic expect~ to
ing in the Cerro Gordo, Ill., High Blaine Tolly of Assumption were j:::iin the Air Force soon. Mrs. li
School. married in August. Mrs-. Tolly
manic is teaching art in the 1u11101
Louella Ann Johnson, '53, is taught last spring in Vandalia High
teaching in the Memorial School, high school at Kewanee, 111., where
grade one, Taylorville, Ill., and School. After a wedding trip to
lives at 216 S. Main. upper New York, the newlyweds she resides at 608 S. Main St.
took up residence at 2016V2 East-
John Kolesa, '53, is band direct- ern Ave., Wesleyville, Pa. Mr. Tolly Janice Jump, '53, and John Boy
or at Cowden High School. is an engineer, having graduated Waggoner of Gays were m rri
-from the College of Engineering in late August. Waggoner is in ~
Carol and Ettajane Jones Pullen, at the University of Illinois in 1952. s2ni:::>r year at Eastern. Mrs. Wa
'53, took positions at Princeton, Ill., goner is teaching business edu
where he coaches and teaches Eng- Shirley Ann Stiff, '53, married
lish in the Bureau Township High William Gene Goudie of Sadorus tion at Paris, Ill., High School.
School and she teaches first and in August. Mr. Goudie is a farmer. Roger Dettro, '53, and Winif
second grad~s. They live at 811 Mrs. Goudie is teaching physical
S. Euclid in Princeton. education in the Longveiw High Rose Hardy, both of Effingh
School. were married in August. Mrs. De
Edgar Smitley, '53, is teaching
industrial arts at South Fork High fro is a former Eastern student w
School, Kincaid, Ill.
will be a senior at the Univer
Nadine Sperandio, '53, is speech
correctionist in the Moweaqua- Fund-Raisers
Stonington Community Unit Schools,
living at 430 E. Locust in Mowea-
qua.

Osler Z. Stephens, Jr., '53, may
be addressed as follows: PFC Osler
Z. Stephens, US55426544 1st Plat.,
Btry C 62nd Armd F. A. Bn., Div
Arty 6th Armored Div., Ft. Leonard
Wood, Mo., or in care of his par-
ents at 8 N. Holmes St., Memphis,
Tenn.

Patricia Ann Tucker, '53, is teach-
ing mathematics at the Virginia, Ill.,
High School.

Margaret Anne Wood, '53,
teaches grade five in the Hewitt
School, Taylorville, where her ad-
dress is 216 S. Main St.

2nd Lt. Merel Pollard, '53, was
recalled to active duty with the
Marines on September 4. He is now
at Quantico, Va., for a five months
review course. He expects to be on
duty for two years.

Anna Collins, '53, is teaching
girls' physical education at Vandalia
High School.

Elmer Shull, '53, is teaching at
Broadlands.

Shirley Strine, '53, accepted a
vocal music teaching position in the
Roosevelt High School, lnkster,
Mich., in August.

Wanda Sue Maurer, '53, is teach-

ing second grade at the Hawthorne

School in Mattoon, Ill. · Joe Snyder, left, and Ivan (Ike) Kennard captain teams whic
leading a highly successful drive for Eastern Boosters Club member
James A. Lynch, '53, and Doro- in Charleston. The club raises funds for scholarships to Eastern stud
Snyder and Kennard are former students now in business in Charles
thea Dietz of Wilmette, were mar-

ried in August. Mrs. Lynch attend-

PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT

Are You My Brother? summer to teach general science
and biology at Martinsville High
School.

Ed Baltmeskis, '53, is assistant
coach at the Oakland, 111., High
School.

Randall Josserand, '53, is build-
ing principal and teacher of grades

five and six in the Carmago, Ill.,
Schools.

Nancy Gray, '53, is teacher of
vocational homemaking at .the Van-
dalia, Ill., High School this year.

Alta Buckley, '53, teaches Eng-
lish, speech, and dramatics at the
Vandalia, Ill., High School.

Paul Allen Wheeler, Jr., '53, mar-
ried Roseanne Walker on Aug. 2.

Mrs. Wheeler is a graauate of But-
ler University. Mr. Wheeler holds
an assistantship at the University of
West Virginia at Morgantown,
where the newlyweds will live.

Harrison Brown, M. S. '53, be-
came superintendent of the take
Villa, Ill., Grade School System in
August, immediately after receiv-
ing the degree at Eastern. Mr.
Brown took the B. S. in Ed. at East-

ern in 1950 and was supervisor of
the elementary schools at Arthur

Jerry Tash (right) queries Dave Hoffman after hearing Dave's name for the next three years. Lake Villa,
called in an Eastern English class. The boys, both freshmen, found that
they were brothers, separated 15 years ago by adoption. Jerry is study- in the Lake County area, has one of
ing to be a landscape architect and Dave plans to become a dentist.
the best salary schedules in the

state. ,

Valeta Schmidt, '53, is teaching

' Spanish and English in the Windsor,

of llinois this year. Dettra reported S. employee in France he met his Ill., High School.
for Naval OCS at Newport, R. I. wife Rushia. The Ruwes now have
on la>tember 14. a daughter. They live at 1304 S. Earl Stelzer, '53, is tei:iching in-
Sixth Ave. in Mattoon.
Karen Jo Moore, '53, became the dustrial arts at Mt. Vernon, Ill., at
bride of Henry H. Husmann of Char·lene Ann McNeil, '53, mar-
•rleston last August: Mr. Hus- ried Lt. Hardd Stevens, '52, on the highest beginning salary ever
mann is a former student, attend- June 14. The newlyweds will live
in Dayton, 0., where Lt. Stevens is paid an Eastern graduate. Stelzer
ing before entering military ser- stationsd at Wright-Patterson AFB.
vice. He returned from Korea last received five years credit on the
ebruary and was stationed at Betty Joan Harrison, '53, began system's salary schedule for his ten
Camp lreckinridge, Ky., at the time teaching homemaking at Beecher
of the lvedding. He expected to be High School near Chicago on Au- years of experience as a. carpenter,
g:.:st 17. however.
llfeased from service in October.
Earl's aunt, Mrs. Harriet Woods
Stelzer, '46, reported (at the re-

Erma Jean Edwards, '53, is teach- Ncrma Thomas, '53, is teaching quest of the Alumnus) that Earl's
ing I s ' physical education at the typing in the Rich Township High monthly salary is considerably
East hland High School at Olney. Scho:il at Park Forrest this year. greater than her total salary of
$490' for her first school term,
Stuart Ruwe, '53, likes to keep ~ ci:nes R. Beck, '53, married Shir- taught in 1926-27. Mrs. Stelzer,
who now has a son at Eastern, has
b_usy. He is a newly appointed as- ley ;v',orrison of Ramsey on June 28. taught in the Mt. Carmel High
School since taking her degree.
. Ii art instructor in management ' Mr. Beck entered military service
Helen Jeaneene Lane, '53, is
in the J.Jniversity of Illinois School on July 14. teaching economics at Pleasant Hill,
Ill.
of tomtTierce, where he is working Phy!lis Cordes (Mrs. Roger lce-
1 ward the Master's in business ncgla), '53, is teaching business Patricia Major, '53, who took a
position as teacher of second grade
lllltgement. At the same time he education in the Decatur, Ill. High in a LaGrange, Ill., school, has been
t~,rking part time in the Mat- Scheel. She Iives at 1611 E. Law-
ill and will not start teaching until
n Elks Club. Ruwe's goal is a rence, Decatur. later this fall.

government post abroad. As a U. Jim Gire, '53, was employed last

PAGE TWENTY·NINE

Dave Cohrs, '53, coach at Saune- To England Margery Steele, '53, is teachi
min, Ill., is the father of Dawn
at the Marca, Ill., High School.

Marie, born Aug. 10. Mrs. Cohrs is Norma M. Thomas, 53, is teacl

the former Lois Horner, a former ing at the Rich High School, Part

· student. Forest, Ill.

Bill Thorn, '53, is now an en- Robert Wrenn, M. S. '53, is teac

gineer for the P. R. Mallory Com- ing in the Sullivan, Ill., High Sch

pany of Indianapolis, makers of Charles Harper, '53, and Do·

radio equipment. Schmittler, '52, were married in

Ella Mae Kercheval, '53, and Charleston, recently.

Martin Chilovich, '54, were married John Simmons, '53, is speel

in September. Mrs. Chilovich correctionist in the Mattoon, II

teaches at Shelbyville. Marty is school system.

counted on to lead the Eastern bas- Janet Beagley, '53, now teac

ketball team this year. He is an English in the Gilman-Danf

honer student. High School in Gilman. Miss Bea

Loren Blaase, '53, and Mary Jane ley will also serve as librarian.

McCormick, a former student, were Monty Stanley, '53, has open

married last June. Loren is teach- a dance studio in Olney, Ill. Mr.

ing at the Ramsey, Ill., High School Stanley will also teach busin

and Mrs. Blaase is a secretary in education in the Clay City Comm

the superintendent's office there. Charlotte Lambert, above, is ity High School.
Jim Finical, '53, is teaching busi- teaching at the Ware School for
girls in England this year under an Lee Griesemer, '53, is coachi
ness subjects at Shelbyville High exchange plan that brought Renate
School this year. He taught last year Lenel of England to take her place in the Sumner, Ill., Schools.
at Allerton, Ill. on the Eastern physical education
staff. Jack Rardin, ex-'53, was indu
Vera Prather, '53, is teaching
home economics in the Herrick, Ill., ed just before finishing a fin•
Community High School.
course for the degree.

Patricia Jean Daron, '53, is tea

ing elementary vocal and ins ru-

Norman and Helen Endsley, '53, er City, Ill., where he lives at 809 mental music in Redmon and Bret
will both teach in the business de- E. Allen St.
ton schools. She is a Charleston resl

partment of the new Limestone Barbara Ellen Hargis, '53, is dent. ·

Township High School near Peoria, teaching at Edwardsville, Ill. Her Anna Lee Collins, '53, is tea

beginning Oct. 19, when the school P. 0. box number is 142. ing physical education and heal
education in the St. Elmo, Ill., Hfg~
opens. Mrs. Endsley is the former Robert D. Ambrose, '53, is em-

Helen Vacketta. She and Mr. Ends- ployed with the Carter Oil Com- School. Her address is 1017 N

ley were married last summer. They pany at St. Elmo, Ill. Walnut St.

are living at 300 Colona St., Apt. Ralph K. Beals, '53, is working Charles William Schlicher, Jr

C, Bartonville, Ill. for the Ford Agency at Stewardson, '53, reports the birth of a son,

Richard Hudnut, '53, is teaching 111. Stephen,· on Sept. 20. Mr. Schlic

biology and general science in the James F. Brubeck, '53, is on a is employed by the Texas Oil Co

Peotone, Ill., High School. Mrs. Bar- teaching assistantship at Ball State in Indianapolis, Ind. Mrs. Schlic

bara Hudnut is teaching fourth Teachers College, Muncie, Ind. is the former Joan Murphy, '51

grade in the Peotone elementary · Wanda Hardway (Mrs. Norman The Schlichers live at 1230 N.

. School system. · Champion), '53, is employed with Temple Ave., Indianapolis.

Gerald Hogshead, '53, is teach- the ABC Transfer Co. of Mattoon, Robert Elmer Adams, '53, no

ing journalism and English in the Ill. Mr. Champion is with Midwest teaches industrial arts in the Fran

Kankakee, Ill., High School. Building Co. lin, Ill., High School.

Edgar Smitley, '53, is teaching Marcia L. Clements, '53, is teach- William R. McMullen, Rober1
Miller, Don R. Myers, Thoma~ i.;
industrial arts and math at the Cat- ing at .Sidell.

lin High School. George Corrie, '53, is studying Osborn, William H. Reineke, a

Norman Patberg, '53, and Mrs. for the Master's degree at the Uni- Reginald Replogle, all Class
Patberg, the former Carolyn Gaert· versity of Illinois.
ner, '53, may be addressed in care 1953, are in military service.
of George A. Locke, Midway Island, Frederick Davison, '53, is attend-
Va. Patberg is in training with the ing the Pilgrim Bible College, Max Judy, ex-'53, was m rri
Marines at Quantico. Frankfort, Ind.
t.:i Miss Ruby Doran of Wats
Richard D. Rowe, ··53, is employ-
Ill. Mr. Judy is now a memb

the 6th Army Band in San Franci

Jack Adams, '53, is the new ed with the Garwood Industries Co. Cal if.

coach at the Nokomis, Ill., High at Mattoon. Clarence Stevenson, ex-'53A
cently completed a course in c:h
School. Charles W. Schlicher, '53, is with ical warfare at the Eta Jima S
cialists School in Japan. Pnva
Anna Bruce, '53, is teaching this the Texas Oil Co. at Indianapolis, Stevenson entered the Arm~ 1
September of 1952.
year at Arthur, 111. Ind.

Gerald Cavanaugh, '53, is teach- Jean A. Scofield, '53, is with the

er and junior high coach at Farm- Carter Oil Co. at Mattoon.

PAGE THIRTY

The above campus map is divided to show campus development during Pre
the Training School, the Practical Arts Building, and a small Power Plant were in
School 5. Practical Arts 6. Power Plant 7. Greenhouse 8. Science Building 9. He
Shops 14. Temporary Training School 15. Booth Library 16. Annex 17. Home Ma
ing 21. Student and Faculty Apartments.

esident Buzzard's administration. In 1933 only tb~Main Building~ ~Pemberton Hall,
existence. Key: l. Old Main 2. Pem Hall 3. Speech-.and Readin,g Clinic 4. Training
ealth Education Building l 0. Cafeteria 11. Student Lounge 12. Band Room 13. Service
anagement Houses 18. Douglas Hall 19. Lincoln Hall 20; lir.rt:oln· Field Service Build-

·


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