970. MARCH

80
970. MARCH

Transcript of 970. MARCH

970. MARCH

A V AI LABLE NOW~ Exciting Recording

of the

SONOS OF THE

UNiVerSiTY OF

MiNNeSOTa!

Full 12" long-Playing Record

u . .. the finest record of college songs ever made!"

A vailable now for your enjoyment in thrilling high fidelity sound, this quality recording includes 16 of your favorit University of Minnesota songs in exciting new arrangements by Dr. Frank Bencriscutto, Uni­versity of Minn sota Bandmaster, played and sung by the Univ rsity Concert and Marching Bands, the Men's Glee Club, and the Univer­sity of Minnesota Chorus. Enjoy all the xci tern nt and pag antry of a University football aft moon in your own hom . It's waiting for you now in this thrilling package of entertainment!

FEATURING THE UNIVERSITY CONCERT

and MARCHING BANDS,

UNIVERSITY GLEE CLUB AND CHORUS

Available only through the Minnesota Alumni Association

PRICE POSTPAID:

MEMBERS

NON­MEMBERS

$250

$300

Add 3 % State Excise Ta x TO TOTAl. (Min nesota residents only)

-----------------------------_._._------------------------Mail 10: MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION GIFT DEPT.

205 Coffman Me morial Un io n Un ive rsity of Minnesota Minneapol is, Minnesota 55.455

Enclosed please find check or money order in the amount of __ _

for copies of "Songs of the University of Minnesota ."

Nom e __________ _ __ I am a Membe r of Ihe Associat ion

AddresLs _________ _ Cord Serial No. ___ _

City ______ Slole ___ _ Expiration Dole . ___ _

L _____________________________________________________ -_ • •

" ... any man who doesn't believe in life insurance deserves to die once without having any."

- WILL ROGERS

*YOU CAN AFFORD MORE PROTECTION , , , BECAUSE IT COSTS LESS, Increase your estate by $10 ,000 with Group Term Life Insur­ance . once your insurance is effective, cash benefits will be paid for death at any time, in any place, from any cause­aircraft accident. heart at1ack , auto crash, blood poisoning , pneumonia, etc.

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60 and Over (' Amounts of insurance and premiums change after age 60 . Write for details .>

• You Are Eligible ... if you are a member of the MAA, age 60 or under, and are either actively employed or are an unem­ployed housewife. (Coverage for residents of Texas, Ohio , New Jersey, and Wisconsin is not available at this time.)

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Stree Address

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Beneficiary (Print Name as MARY DOE , not MRS JOHN DOE)

Relationsh ip

THE UNION CENTRAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

• Generally No Physical Exam ... usually only the short state­ment of health on the enrollment form IS necessary. • Beneficiary .. you name your own beneficiary, which you may change at any time. Special beneficiary arrangements can be made to fit your own requirements. Set1lements of death claims as a monthly income may be provided.

• No Premium To Pay While Disabled .. your life insurance premiums are waived and insurance remains In force if you become totally and permanently disabled (as defined in the contract) before age 60.

• You May Change ... to a permanent individual poliCY which builds cash values for retirement. When you terminate member­ship in MAA, when you reach age 70, or when any insurance terminates because of a change in age beyond age 60, you may convert your life insurance to any of the individual policy forms, except term insurance. issued by the insuring company

IT'S EASY TO ENROLL 1. Complete Group Life Insurance Enrollment Card below. 2. Mail to : Minnesota Alumni Insurance Admin istrator

P.O. Box 907, Minneapolis, Minn. 55440 3. Send no money now ... you will be notified of the ap­

proval of your application and will receive your fi rst billing from the Administrator.

Statement of Health l he following information is submitted as evidence of my insurability : Weight Height ________ _ Have you ever been declined or rated for life insurance? __ _ (If yes, give details below) Within the past five years, have you been confined for more than five days by any illness or injury or undergone any surgical operations? (If yes. give details below) Are you in good health? ______________ _

Comments :

I hereby apply for that coverage for which I am or may become eligible under the above Group Policy issued by The Union Cent ral Life Insurance Company, Cincinnati . Ohio 45201 .

_______ X __________ =-__________ ___ Date SIgnature

DR. ROBERT HOWARD ANNOUNCES PLANS TO LEAVE DEANSHIP OF COLLEGE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Dr. Rob rt B. Howard '42B '44MB '45MD '52PhD, dean of th mv r­sity's Coll ge of M dieal ci nce , r centl announced plan to leave hi pos t this summer. Dr. Howard

campus with th - purpos to mak proposal to th Board of R g nt r gar ding the r organization of Health i nc a a division of th Univ r ity. Thc l' port hould b re­I as d in Februar .

hold top administrati (' p t for an ind nnite I ngth of tim aI 1 that I \ peopl h uld b brou ht i ll

to Bll uch positions from ti m(' to ti 111 •

aid th at he will not be available to head the niv rsity' H ealth ci­enc e nter, hould such a position be created.

on equ ntl , th H aIth ci­cnc are xp t d to be r 'organiz­ed thi summ r and Ho\ Hrd, in f­feet, dcclin d tll opportunity to be consl1 I' d for the post of niv r it}'

Howard, who claimed that he is not resigning a dean, said hi deci-ion was mad in anticipation of th

elimination of th oIl g of fedi­cal Science, a a di tinct group, from th University H ealth ci nces later this vear. t[ dical Sci nce in­clude the schools of f dicine, ur ­

i pr sident or provo t of th H aIth . Th compl x in-clud s th hool of f dicin ,

ursing, Publi H aIth and Den­tistr '; and th 'oll g of Pharma ')' and V terinar t[edicin a w II a

niversity H~spitals. ing and Public Health and ' ity Ho pitals. Howard anticipat ending hi

In January a committ of nation­all)' distingui hed h alth scien e edu ators vi ited th Univer it)'

dean hip about July 1 and will th n take a a1" s I ave of ab nc . H fe I that individual hould not

4

BECKER ENTRE-CAPITAL The primary objective of BEe is to arrange the private purchase of established businesses , select outstanding management-entrepreneurs to transform them into highly profitable enterprises and , at an appropriate time, foster their growth and expansion through public ownership.

The man with a record of managing a sizeable business (mini­mum $10 million sales), who is motivated by an important ownership stake, the prospect of significant capital gain, and the excitement of building a successful busines , will want to become acquainted with BEe.

Michael J. O'Reilly, Vice President (HBS '57) A. G. Becker & Co. Incorporated

60 Broad Street, New York, New York 10004 Telephone: 212/363-2800

wi ll welcome the opportunity to discuss BEe with you In

complete confidence.

A. G. Becker & Co. I NCORPORAT&D

Members New York S lack Exchallge and olher prillcipal slack exchallges

ALUMNI NE\I\'

WE RECENTLY HEARD FROM. .. A. C. M . Ahlen '32BA ' 33MA ' 42PhD

Mi nneapolis, Minnesota

ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY' S IMAGE

"Th ni\ rsity could do om thin to improve its image!

"WIlY FHEE? Why an organization to promote a psychological diseas ? I sup­I' ~e the next move will be som organiza­tions for caprophiliacs and/or n krophili­aCS - both fonTIS of psychic illness.

"Th~ Daily, which as r cently as Ii e years ago, was on of th b tter publica­tions in linneapolis can improve its lan­guage. Information, Ir. Hovemann hould be informed, can be conveyed without the us of gutt r language.

"Yes, I am old; so will the edi tor of th Daily becom if he live long nough .

" It h possible to be a critical thinker, all opponent of social inju tice and an ac­curate narrator without accepting an apothe ls of anarchy and bad manners."

Fred W . Gellerman , Jr. '68AA

Minneapol is, M innesota

ABOUT MAA MEMBERSHIP

' 'I'm writing to apologize for the littl response rv giv n to mo t of your nne letters during th year. I r alIyappreciat d th first ear of fr m mber hip in th I . The magazines I received were very

infomlath e and I took advantage of the ho pitalization insurance.

"During th past year I have been preth bu~ going to chool el where and working part-time.

"I would like very much to • ppl)' for ( ~1 ) m mb r hip in the near future, but I am for ed to ompl te a militar ob­ligation, and I'm afraid I wouldn't be in \er)' 10 c touch with the niYer it .

"I would like to apply for m mbership in March 1974 if at all po ible."

Dr. Rodney Powell to Combine U Medical Work with Community

Dr. Rocln Powell, a pediatri in­tern '61-'6:", re id nt '64-'65 at lh ' M eli al hool

igh­ent r in the

Watt district of Lo n 1 , ali­fornia, has been appoint d prof -

r of publi h alth and p diatri at the ni\'cr'it)'. Dr. P w 11 will

~ [ R II, 1970

also become ar a program dir ctor for Hennepin County Cen ral Hos­pital's planned sat llit n ighbor­hood clinics. H will assum both jobs in mid- larch.

Health cienc structure expected oon.

For s ing a "n w approach to m dicin .. Dr. Powell will try to coordinat his two jobs. H e said that this i an xciting tim to come

T aching medical students more than th cientmc aspects of medi­cine int re ts him, e pecia1ly in cour s about man and his com­munity, Dr. Powell said. H e sees xciting pos ibilitie in propos-

ed }'ledical chool curriculum back to th niv r it) b cau th 1 dical chool i in a transitional tag , with r organization of th

chang . In his \ ork at Pilot City H ealth

C nter which i part of the Pilot

OFFICIAL RINGS OF THE

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

OFFICIAL MINNESOTA RING - Selected by the Soard

of Directors of the Minnesota Alumni Association os the

official alumni design . The 10K Gold Ring is set with moraon

synthetic Garnet. Minnesota Side d isplays the University Seal

with the Golden Gopher and Minnesota " M". Your graduation

dote appears at the top. Un iversity Side features Northrop

Auditorium combined with elements for most of the colleges.

Academic Degrees appear on th is side. Greek leiters or club

emblems may be encrusted on the stone.

PRICES TO MEMBERS :

(Postage included)

Men' s Ring, Open Back

Men's Ring, Closed Back

Women's Ring (Miniature of Men's)

Women's Dinner Ring

For White Gold , odd

$37.40

39.56

32 .00

32.00

liberal Am

Encrusting: 2 Greek Leiters

Encrusting : 3 Greek Leiters

5.00

3.00

5.00

Nan·Member pr ices are slightly higher; write for informa tion.

M.dical or Oent.1 (with DDS I

Low

MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 205 Coffmon Memorial Union, University of Minnesato Minneapolis, Minn. 55455

Enclosed please find my check or money o rder for L Please send my Minnesota Ring , postpaid , and mode up as indicated below:

Finger Size- Yr. Grad- Degree­

Open Style __ Closed __ Greek Letter,,----

( om a member_ Serial No, _______ _

Nam e' _________________ _

Addres's..s _______________ _

City ______ Stat ... e _____ -LZip--

o All University

o Medical

o Dental

o (T 0 Low

o Liberal Arts

o Business

o Engineering

o Morris 0 Duluth

o Women 's Dinner Ring

o Women's Miniature

o White Gold

(Note: Minnesota Residents odd 3 00 soles tox.)

5

Powell •• .

ity ar a proj ct in Minn apoli , and ntually in oth r at Hit linie , Dr. Pm ell will oordinat

th work of the cent rand g n r­all plan h w to me t h alth car n d of th poor through a n w H enn pin ount)' n ral Hospi­tal.

Dr. Powell i a nationall -known advocate of resid nt-inHu n d n ighborhood health ar c nt r , an inno ative approach to om­munity mediein for th poor. In D ember, a an outsider, h ,as inRu ntial in settling a di put con-cerning Pilot City Haith nter ' governan .

Th Watt ighborhood linie, whi h Dr. Powell will oon 1 a ha pion red in r sid nt-controll d ommunit)' m dicin . It ,a e tab-

lish d b th niv rsity of OUtl1-rn alifomia aft r th 1965 and

1966 racial riots in th ' att c-tion of Lo ngeles. Th clinic i now fund d dir ctl b th D paltment of HaIth, Education and Welfar .

U Law School Senior To Serve Warren Burger

University Law Scbool senior lian . Ryan has b en appointed a cl rk

in th office of U.S. Supr m ourt Justi e Warr n Burger for on y ar, b ginning July 1, 1970.

"w consider this a in gular honor for Mr. Ryan and for th Law School," said William B. Lockhalt, d an of tll School. "H is on of a select f w from th Univ l' ity who hav l' c iv d this honor."

Each year approximat ly 20 law school s niors from throughout th United tates ar sel ct d to rv as clerks in th Suprem ourt. Six are eho n to s rv th hi f justic

1966 graduat of Dart mouth 011 g, Ryan taught m ric an

g v rnm nt in a w Od ans, Loui ian a high school for on year before moIling in th ni rsity' Law School. H is presid nt of th Minn sota Law R vi w this y nr.

6

OUR FAMOUS OWN MAKE

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H ere is our ugge ti on for adding color and fre 'h­

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yarn-dyed, long taple cotton oxford, are made in

our own workroom in th e celebrated Brooks Broth­

er s button-down collar style with left brea t pocket.

nd, of cour e, old exclu ively by u .

In yarn-dyed blue) peach} yellow) green} pink} slolle or ecrII) $1 0.50. 11 Iso in Wllilc} $10

All in sizes 14-32 to 17 Y2 -36.

M ai l orders ca refully filled.

ESTULlSHfO 1818

74 E. MADl ON ST., NR. MICHIGAN AVE., HI AGO, ILL. 60602 ATLANTA' BOSTON ' LOS ANGELES · NI:.W YORK

PITTSBURGH· SAN FRAN IS O· SCARSDALE' WASHINGTON

THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

FOUNDED IN THE FAITH THAT MEN ARE ENNOBLED

BY UNDERSTANDING DEDICATED TO THE ADVANCEMENT

OF LEAR ING AND THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH

DEVOTED TO THE INSTRUCTIO OF YOUTH

AND THE WELFARE OF THE STATE

THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Edwin L. Haislet '31 BSEd '33MA '38EdD

EXECUTIVE COMMITIEE lames A. Watson '42BA Harry Heltzer '33MetE Richard E. Kyle '27LLB Irene D. Kreldberg '30BBA Wallace L. Boss '28BSBus Kenneth C. Glaser '42BBA Hermon J. Arnott '248A John E. Carroll '33BChem J. Roscoe Furber '24EE Oscar R. Knutson '27LLB George T. Pennock '34BA .... Carl Platou 'SIMHA BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Executive Director

President First Vice President

Second Vice President Secretory Treasurer

Post President Boord Member Boord Member Boord Member Boord Member Boord Member Boord Member

Term expires 1970: Carl M. Anderson '27BA '30LL8, Francis M. 80ddy '30BA '36MA '39PhD, Wallace L. Boss '288SBus, Kenneth C. Glaser '42BBA, Mrs. Dixie Ingersoll Gass 'ISBA, Florence M. Lehmann '23BA, Melvin 0 Sletten '3SDDS, William F. White '49BAJourn. Term expires 1971: Harry Heltzer '33METE, Oscar R. Knutson '27LLB, Irene D. Kreidberg '30BBA, Sheldon M. Lagaard '41BA '43MB '43MD, Mrs. Jeannette R. Piccard '42PhD, Bryon Smith '2SBS '2SMA, James A. Watson '42BA, Hermon Welch '33BSAg, Carl Woie 'SOBEE, Howard F Woo '27BA '31 BArch. Term expires 1972: Herman J . Arnott '24BA, William O. Carlson NG, J. Rascoe Furber '24EE, Mrs. Violet Rasacker Grof ' 33-'37, John Hass '33LlB, Maynard A. Speece '43BSAgEd, Patrick J. Turner '48BSEd, Charles H. Withers 49BAJaurn. Term expire. 1973: Fred Agnich '37BA, Harry Atwood '31BA, Rolph E. Britigan '40MD, John E. Corroll '33BChem, Gerold H. Friedell '49BA 'SUD, Honorable Joseph Karesh '29BA, Melva lind '24BA '43MHA, Donald W. McMoore 'S I BSEd, George T. Pennock '34BBA, Carl Platou SI MHA, Jock Stromwall 'SOBA. REPRESENTING THE CONSTITUENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS, L. Jean· nette Wiggs 'SOALA, President, Minnesota Alumnae Club; Russell Stans­field '48BSAg, President, College of Agriculture, Forestry and Home Eco­nomics Alumnie Association; Morton C. Mosiman '40BBA. President, School of Business Administration Alumni Association; Dr. Donald H. Nelson 'S2DDS, President, School of Dentistry Alumni Association; Roy S. Forstad '60BSEd, President, College of Educat ion Alumni Association; Dr. Leonard S. Arling '36MD, President, Medicol Alumni Associa· tion; Keith Nordby '47 AMS, President, Mortuary Scie nce Alumni Association; Groce E Gahdes '43BSNE '60MEd, President. School of Nurs· ing Alumnae Association; rho mas J Novak '42BSPhm, President, College of Pharmacy Alumni Associotion ; Paul Hetland 'S68A, President, Col­lege of Liberal Arts and University College Alumni Association; Roland D. Wordell '49BMETE, PreSident, Institute of Technology Alumni Association; Milton C. Stensland 'S4BS 'S6DVM, President, Veterinary Medical Alumni Association; Elizabeth V. Hunt 'S2MSW, President, School of Social Work Alumni Association; Mrs. Goldie Wilensky '39GDH, President, Dental Hygiene Alumnae Association; Ellsworth T. Swanson 'S9AA, President, General College Alumni Association; Mrs. Frances Hanson '31 BS, President, Division of Medical Technology Alumni As· sociation; John R. Finnegan '48BA '6SMA, President, School of Journalism & Moss Communications Alumni Association; Gerold l. Moritz '68UMC, President , University of Minnesota, Crookston, Alumni Association . REPRESENTING NON·CONSTITUENT GROUPS: Gerold E. Magnuson 'SI BBA 'S4LLB, PreSiden t, Low Alumni Association; Wally Salovich, President "M' Club. PAST PRESIDENTS AND ALUMNI FUND ADVISORY COMMtnEE Russell E. Backstrom '2SBSME '27MSME, William F. Braasch 'OOBS '03MD, Wendell T. Burns ' 16BA, Victor Christgau '24BSAg, George Earl '06BA '09MD, Kenneth C. Glaser '42BBA, Franklin D. Gray '25BA, Wa ldo E. Hardell '26BSBus, Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA, Hibbert M. Hill '23BSCE, Arthur R. Hustad '16BA, Francis A Lund '31-'3S, Virgil J. P. Lundquist '43MD, Joseph Moun '32BA '35 LLB, Harvey Nelson '22BS '2SMD, Charles Judd Ringer '38·'4 1, Glenn E. Seidel '36ME, Edwin A Willson '30BEE, Wells J . Wr ight '368SL '36LLB, Edgar F. Zelle '13BA. HONORARY LIFE ASSOCIATION MEMBERS Dr. J . L Morrill, President Emeritus of the University; VV111iam T Middlebrook, Vice President Emeritus of th e UniversitYI Dr. O . Mere­dith Wilsonl Gerold T. Mullin.

THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

ALUMNI NEWS

(Our 69th Year)

MARCH , 1970

Point of View

10 Pollution

VOL. 69 , O. 7

12 To-Winged Sanitizer for a Polluted World

16 Pollution Report Center 18 The Focu International In Home

Economic _1 The All-Time Gopher T am

23 Infant Care to a e More Li e

26 Medical Micro ope Fund Boo ted by t. Paul Ram Medical Foundation

Da e hama' Gopber Tale

30 holar hip Benefit Score Record Suc e

31 Th Uni er it

..J. round & b ut

37 Death

ON THE COVER: Po llu tion, evident every morn ing with the sun· rise on the University compus, has become a serious problem, affecting our air, our water, our land and our lives. Read

about it in this issue.

Mary Lou Aurell '62BAJaurn

Edwin l. Haislet '31 BSEd '33MA '37EdD Edilar

Managing Ed itor

Second class postage paid at Minneapolis, Minn .• under Act of Cong ress of Ma rch 3, 1879. Annual dues of the Associotion are $10 of which $8 constitutes a year's subscription to the Alumni News. Subscription for non·alumni : $10 per yeor. Notional ad­vertising representatives: American Alumn i Mogozines, New York, N.Y. Publisher: Minnesota Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Union, Un iversity of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Minnesota S545S.

Continuing the Minnesota Alumni Weekly which was estab· lished in 1901 , th e Minnesota Alumni Vo ice and the Gopher Grad. Publ ished monthly from September through June by the Minnesota Alumni Association , 20S Coffman Union , University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 554S5. Member of the American Alumni Council.

POINTS of 111111111111111111111111111111111111 11111111111111 111111111111 11111

VIEW ED HAISLET Executive Director

8

Figures for the annual giving of alumni to the Alumni Fund for the calendar year 1969 show a drop both in amount received and number of donors. OveralL however. 14.393 alumni ga ve $1.321.582.26. to the University. a record to be proud of.

Donors Amount Alumni Fund 10.840 $249.029.41 Special Projects Program 493 20.549.50 Law School Fund and Scholarship Program 735 117.815.00 Medical Foundation 1.500 37.500.00 U of M Foundation · 77 638.132.00 Regents 748 258.556.36

Totals 14.393 $1.321.582.26

• Includes only alumni donors - pledges are not included.

The Alumni Fund raised $249.029.41. down $66.420.02 or 21 percent from a year ago. Subtracting the $100.000 bequest received last year. the alumni annual giving program actually showed a $33.580 increase.

The total number of gifts for 1969 was 10.840. down 1.439 or a 11.71 percent decrease. The only rea­son apparent is dissatisfaction about student happenings on college campuses everywhere .

The per capita gift dropped from $25.69 in 1968 to $22.97 in 1969. Likewise alumni participation went from 12.52 percent in 1968 to 10.84 percent in 1969.

The number of donors has grown rapidly the last six years - but the actual percentage of those participating is still very small. In 1969. 10.84 percent participated with a per capita gift of $22 .97. As to what to give we suggest a gift of a minimum of $1.00 per year for each year out of the Univer­sity. If out one year - give a dollar. if out ten years give $10. if out 35 years give $35 - and so on. Many alumni are now following this p lan. It is a very modest plan. well within the grasp of a ll alumni. While our number of donors is not great. with just a few more. Minnesota could join the honor role of the top ten universities in the country as regards number of donors.

LUM I EV

The 10 schools with the greatest number of donors are: 31,129 Ohio State University

28,895 University of Michigan 17,489 Texas A & M University 16,177

15,217 15,000 12,693 12,243 11 ,886 10,840

University of Tennessee University of Illinois Indiana University University of Kansas University of Cincinnati Penn State University

University of Minnesota

When it comes to the amount given by alumni to the annual fund­

Minnesota has a way to go yet -

$ 1.751.467 Ohio State University 1.265,261 University of Michigan

877,363 Purdue University 775,718 Indiana University 757,921 Penn State University 694,793 University of Illinois 619,968 University of Virginia 504,749 University of Wisconsin 490,580 University of Kansas 462,619 Texas A & M 249,029 University of Minnesota

As regards total gifts by alumni - Minnesota is very close to being in the top 10. $5,840,707 University of Illinois

3,582,404 University of Michigan 3,340,971 University of Delaware 3, 182,126 Rutgers University 2,580,691 University of Wisconsin 2,061 ,618 University of Virginia 1.751.467 Ohio State University 1,702,006 University of California 1.388,404 University of Kansas 1,311,540 Iowa State University

$1.321 ,582 University of Minnesota

Last year (1969) - rather than sending out a brochure to each college group concerning their own college projects, a single combined piece was mailed which listed all the various projects of the Alumni Fund. In this way the number of appeals to each alumnus was cut down while at the sarne time the alumnus could give to the project of his choice. The only other mailing sent out was in support of the Freshman Scholarship Program. Also a mailing was made to the IS classes, from 1920 through 1935. So at most, alumni received only two requests for funds.

To all of you who gave to one of the projects of the Alumni Fund, our sincere thanks and ap­preciation.

M RCH, 1970 9

POLLUTIO ,

n's inhumanity to himself and his environment. · · sl wly destroying a nation's resources and health

YOUR AUTOMOBILE is a major producer of air pollutants: from America ' s 80 million plus automobiles come more than one·half of all of our atmospheric wastes. The fumes that spew from your cor's exhaust pipe are a complicated mixture of poisons, created because the internal combustion engine cannot burn all of the fuel that it receives. These fumes are pocked with a danger that can become worse when, on a warm day, the sun shines on the mixture of hydrocarbons and nitrogen dioxide creating new and even more harmful products - ozone and the eye-burning compound called PAN . This complex chemical interaction resu lts in smog. And though large diesel - or gasoline-powered trucks and buses also add to the problem, automobiles and light trucks are the major offenders simply because they constitute approximately 95 percent of all vehicles on our roadways.

THIS BIG, BLACK HUMP IN THE MISSISSIPPI, below the Third Avenue bridge, was first thought by many Twin Citians to be a coal pile, but what resembles a block monster rising out of the river is in fact a monster: the snow and ice poured by city snow removal equipment into the river, to eventually melt and disperse its collection of streetlitter and chemical wastes into the waters that serve as a source of drinking supplies for a number of Minnesota communities .

THE AMOUNT OF WASTES poured doily into our oir throughout the United States is almost unbelievable - 390,000 tons every 24 hours. These wastes come from hundreds of different pollutants and millions of different sources of pollution . America 's chimneys and factories pours sulfur compounds into the air, as the stocks from the University's heating plant can be seen doing on the opposite page. Wherever large amounts of heavy fuel oil and cool are burned , tons of sulfur oxide pollutes the air we breath and increases in amount as fuel consumption increases . The sulfur compound not only damages many things around us - crops, certain flowers and trees, buildings and statutes - but, most of all , is a hazard to our own health . COMMON WATER POLLUTION, left middle, has been photographed recently at Minnesota's Lake Minnetonka . Tires and tin cans litter a lakeshore that has become an eyesore . And its water? Rapidly being con taminated by human " garbage" that is making it unfit for swimming and as a drinking water source. LAND POllUTION, lef t bottom, is all around us . It not only affects us visually, but also as to land useage. This rubble , the discarded remains of buil d ing demolition on the Mississippi River near the University, has rendered on area of land useless th rough its presence. And though it may eventually disintegrate and go bock into the soil , the chem ical decomposition of its ingredients may couse irreparable harm to the land on which it lies .

~It I II, 1970 11

AGENT DIPTERA

Two-Winged Sanitizer For A Polluted World

F LIES - the two-wing d insects of th ord r Diptera - populat th world. Betwe n 60,000- 5,000 species have been counted b cientist who di cov r more ach tim they tudy a particular group, projecting an incalculabl numb r of individual flies.

Man - the two-legged creatur of th p cies Homo sapiens - also populates th world. f n ar not a num rOllS as £Ii . But man's numb rs ar known as he polIut s the world.

At th sam tim that man has b n busy spoiling his environment with pollutant wa t s, and probably for th same number of ars, h ha b n watting, spraying and shooing th two-wing dins ets.

G org Rau nhorst thinks man houid stop. 1£ w r aeh d into basic int Big nc to gain from

innovation and exp rim ntation, w might oon call £Ii th world's sanitizers - instead of d troying th creatur s that could cl an up our nvironm nt, Rau nhor t recently told th Alumni ws.

Fli - the world's sanitizers? To most of u this is a qu stion, bIe id a.

But to the Olivia (Mino sota) farm rand niv rSityof Minn sota reg nt th id a ha a oundn s being

12

proved through ongoing xperim ntati n. For th pa t t\ 0 Y ars an as 0 iat prof or f a ian at olorado Stat Univ rsity h. u fully inv stigat d tb utilization of hi k n manur -norm all all d a pollutant wa. t - a a iabl by-product in our agri ultural pr du tiOI1 .

Thi world- anitiz r oneept b arne kno\ n becaus a mall community of 500 n d d an conomie an w r to its \Va t di po a1 prohl ms. 0 rno , Minn ota, is fa ed \ ith th on tru tion of a eonh'ol y t m that could bankrupt it.

enator tanle Holmquist, majorit ' lead r of the ~Iinn sota cnat i con ern d about 0 mo and its futur . h sought possibl olution to 0 1110

probl 111 , on limo ativ alt rnativ , tll< t a ha not b n tried on a larg -scal , \ as ugg t d b G org Rau ~nhor t \ ho l' call d th lorado

tate ni l' ity a 0 iat prof sor' work. Profe or Bryan Jill r ba found a w rkabl 111 lbod

involving th " ding" of hi k 11 manur with ili ' eggs th at dev lop t r due th '\ as tc mat >rial" to us ful fcrtiliz r eompon nt \ hil th' , t11 III ('1 s gro\ into a high prot in f d suppl m nt. Th

L if I E'

ational Institut · of II ' alth has be n backing }'liller's proj ct \ ith grant aid.

For th > two m n - and p ssibl; for us - th inbcr 'nt 1> 'a\C'nge)' ·apabiliti of th · 'ommon hous Hy could ery well b • th • lution to on of th major world pollution probl m .

Modern agribusin ·s and te 'hnology ontinu to produ..:c, in alarming amount , o-call ·d \Va t s that We' ~prcad thr ughout our nvironment as pollutant. We us ' arbag ' for land 611 in d veloping ur ~ tatic '1crC'age - and toda~ 's dump is COy 'red from our e\ s and mind by n wI contaminat d oil and, ~v ntually, d ep' \ ater' uppli .

ur mod m di po al , t m pour raw sludg another pollutant \ at , through ulv rt into our ri\' rs, lak and tream , \\'ith no h , d for th health of a dwindling" at l' uppl.. tudy by th \nn) orp of Engin er , l' leased in early F bruary, reveal 'cl that the dumping of ewage slud e from 19 m ·tropolitan I \V ork \\ a te-tr atment plant mto the ocean water outsid \\' York Harbor ha d ' tr ~ d all ea lif for mil around th dumping pint.

Yet oth r pollutant wast our grOlUld \\" t '1' through the sometim indiscriminate 11 of fertilizer, herbicides, fllllO'ic:i 1 and pe ticide on farm land that ha c seeped nitrat into th O'round water and p isoned infant childr n. outh rn linn ota families ha known thi d ath that om from well fed with nitrnt'- ontaminat d round ",at r, \. n though th 'UlT uneling soil has yet to re\' al full:' its pollution fr m an o\' rdo of h mical .

s modern t chnology ha continu d to de tro: our land, our water and our air, Rau nhor t h, re-nam d it "mod rn killolo ....

Y t h i optimi tic - and able to look, a a man onccl'l1 1 with p opl and th ir n ds , at a poil d

ellvirol1m nt ,md to ar h for \ a s that neither create no)' cl 'stro , but u e and r -u e \ i 1\· \ h, t our endronm nt off r to u . , ith uch' O11\ 'i ti n, Rauenhor t ask us t abandon th W I'd "wast " and "eli 'posal" anclu in t ad th term "by-product utilization ".

TIl(' B\ 'an b one of man: agent ' to hdp U' make

All flesh is grass All grass is waste

Lite is but a race-Blade to blade-in haste

-George Rauenhorst

}.1 R II 1970

this ecologically-wi transition, if w ·mploy this common in ct to turn garbage, ludge, manure or oth r pollutant "wast " into useful by-products.

CH LLE 'GI TG, plausibl facts on th us of flie as pollution control agents, not onl) for the recy lin of chicken manure but for oth l' "waste " as well, haw been revealed throu h re arch.

"The larO' quanti tie of IudO' that as ~ et our modem waste dispo al) terns produc and < ccumulat have become a tr m ndous pollution problem. till \ e ontinue to dump it into our \\'at r, onto our land

and ev ntually into our air to act, a pollutant rather than to pro e it in uch a \\'a, that we can make use of it ' sour of plant nutritent for fertiliz r while at th ame time producin a hi h-prot in £e d uppl m nt for chickens and other animal ,"

Rau nhOl t aid. "A larg f d lot has, b cau of it o\'er-ri h

nitrate hUld ar a, b n blamed for pollutincr air that in tum pollut d a lake two mile away. Th air picked up the nitrat from th hmd and l' d po ited th 111 in th wat r.

"If thi ame ludO' , inst ad of beinO' pil d up, . '. e d d' "ith H~ 0' (lan'a), the dey lopin H· -. a ma got - will f d on th or ani material in th \\'a t , r du it, and hun a ticky ma of un pent ' nergy into a mol' - llcentrated fertiliz l' by-produ that can b b nen ial for th land it ori inalh' am from." .

,\ the maO'got bmrow and fed, th \ C n\'ert tick: 'lu I L to <til a ily-IHUlcllecl granutU' mat rial

",hil rcdu inO'it m i ture ont nt by about 0 percent, it oraani 'ub tim by about 0 p rccnt ,md its dry matter 0\ er 50 p rc nt.

For exampl , 20 0 pound of raw luda from wag plant ontain 1500 pounds of \\'. tcr and 5 0

P un Is f 'olid . If that am 20 0 pound i ultur d. or " e,d d" with a . 1. rvae, rear h how" that the mas is rcelu ed to 40 pOlmd ' - 56 pound f \\'at r, :,.-10 I un 1, of lids and 40 p und of pupa ( the intcrmediar) dl'n'l pm nt t, ge f the H\ b tw n Jaryal maacyots and adulth d ).

The maggot. burn up, as energ:. the rO',mi mat riab ~f , Iuda ' during the ir bUlTo\\'ine: ~l11d

L v

1

f ding, as \ 11 a p rm ating th mas with ox)' 'en thu liminating odor. Th granulated su b tance that result wb n th e usc fe ding and ar remov d , i a il d eb drat d to r mo th remaining moistur eont nt.

Th e £lie top f ding on \ ast when the reaeb th pupa tag in their lif - 1 , and become dormant. It i at thi tim that th Hi an be separat d from th granular rna and kill d .

on equ ntl , th in ct do s not r a h ,dulthood ( flies as w know them) - that stag of it dev lopm nt wb n it can tran POlt di a organi m .

Tb m ggots reduce \ bat \ as one aUed \ astc material into a by-produ t that i xtr 111 1 high in many of th trae el rn nts la king in man commercial fertiliz I' todu): mangan s, opp r, zinc and iron. A valuabl , us able fertiliz I' com from this reu e of sludge.

nd the flies' u fulnes' do 's not I d \ ith th ir death as pupae. After th ey ar kill d through a pa t urization pro e , th pupa can b com a fe d upplement - p articularl valUe bl b cau e of th ir high quality protein ba e du to amino acid eont nt. 1ill 1" \ ork bo\ that < t death th pupa are 60 p ere nt prot in , 10 p rc I t fat nnd 12 p er nt a h .

"Experim ntal rations with fl pupn om, vitamins and min rals have out-p rform d e0111111 rei all) aee pted balane d ration for broil r chicken from 10 to 20 p re nt," the I' g 'nt aid.

"'vVe should rem mber that without £lie, song bir Is an't sing. Song bird cannot rai ' their youn on

we d s d alon . Th p arent bird mu t fe d th m maggots, pupa worm or some equall) hi h protein upplem nt, or th )' will not ur iv ."

M ODER t chnology wi ll hav ' to tak " a big "tep witb human and animal I' sources to mak th £I a full-seal world anitizcr. Hau nhorst is th , first to admit this. How v r, a d "v lopm nta] ph sieal planl to handl th op ration is bing eont mplat d , and th far111 l' n ay build a "n od -}" fly 'ontrol unit on his own land.

similar, but larg r physical unit, Bnanc d through privat industr or local gOY 'rnments ma

14

TECHNOLOGY

The babbling brook The river 'S crook Beautiful to see Nature 's fantasy Fish nibble Moss numble Air Treas Water trans Place to romp Waste to dump Decisions be Our decree Place to swim Future dim

-George Rauenhorst

aid in sol ing our sludg" prot t 'ms as \\ ell a ' garbag problelll ' . Fresh ludge" s it is 'urrentl: produ 'pel by our waste clispo al s slems from se\ age and gclrbag , is heav) t handle and liHicult to dl') .

Ho\ e '1', if it i put through a II) l' ntrol c('nll'J', it appears that the sl udge can be <}uiL'kl) , ('conomicall) - and 'anitaril) - proce 'd .

Oncc in ide th '('nter buildin 1, th · tudg(' mighl be 'onBn d in fly- tight structures to k 'p wild Hie ut until il i mo d , I11cchani 'nIh , ont a 'on\,(' I'

S) st I1l 'imultan ousl), with Ii) maggot · that ma) be aUlomaticall), "s d I" along th ' waisl or enter of lhe con 'or. That ction of the onv ) r holding th sludg and magg t ould b ' 'neJo d , not onI) to n inilliz hU111an ntact with th ' \ a t material but also to maximize ontr 1 of the el vironment und I' which th magg ts fe 1.

Th ' g r at r the h ' at intensity the de\ loping £li e~ 'nc unt l' in their fe ,ding pro ss, th ' fa. t I' the matur to th pupae tag ' . t a]'o 111 t mperatlU' [72 cl 'gr s, lar al dige tion of ludg takes about eV'11 da),s. By raising th temperature in th , nclo eel 'Ot or, ligestion tim might b ' 'ut to four or fh t'

da s. t the nd of th p c incalJ -timed on or 5) stem.

th rec1uc d , granular malerial 111a b' automati all) s parntt'd from th e sludg b),-proehl t tl rough a vari't f 111 chanicall impos('d nditi n . On " th' cparation i mpl ' Lc, th ' lupa( uld b mo\ cd to a val to be pasteuri zed and I'e< di 1 [or hipm nt a~

L M I

b -ing packed for shipment as f ltiliz r. This f rtilizer \ ould have a probable comm reia! valu of $5.00 it ton, and the Hies as f d supplem nt of $5.00 additional per ton f raw sludg '.

Just as th convey r proe 'ssing of sludg might be continual or C) cHeal, might the production of th working maggots within th cent r. ueb a c nt r could provid a s -If-sustaining nvironm nt for its \V rid anitiz r .

Th common hou · fly, with its rapid generation tim complet it lif -eycl in seven days or I sunder controll d ondition. eal d cag in th cent r mi bt house pecially-d velop d adult br d r fli that are disea e-fr to control th pre ne of pathog ns.

in Ie adult br der produc approximatel), 200 'gg or larvae a da) and up to 1000 the fir t, k, that

she could depo it, along with the oth r of h r p ie, in thc ludg f d that is in the cag . The B) cag s need not b larg ; one pound of \Va te material will Sll tain the egg from 1,20 flie .

Bec:1us of the numb r produced, the B, gg could b> "gath r d" t\ 0 to four tim daily from th cag , probabI) automaticall), ;md transf ned to th conv or )' t m for" e ding". Each tim th egg ' ar > "gath r d," a n w uppl) of raw ludge could be f cl into th By cag . Th bre der Bi should be rep\ac d once a w k aft r having compI ted th mo t pr ductivc p riod in their life-cycl

G E RGE Rauenhor t beli v - that aari ultmc, the most basic of basic ci"ilization' art ', has howll stroncr res a1' 11 and capability in dollar produ tion, el arl di pIa) ing "battl of the bul e" ta ti . Y t Rauenhor t i a man d di at d to improving the lifc and living in rural areas , and i outspok 11 in his struggle.

Th fanner r ntl) built a "spa e-ag ., barn n hi Ian 1 that utiliz wa. te animal heat from foul nil' c\.bau t. The h at \chana r i activated b) sohli' ncrg: f r tll(' wint ' ring of attl in onfinement f 'ding quarter. Thi onstru tion was a 60,0 0 aambl tllat worked. It

major purp ' (:' is ti , 1 10 1.' with tllat of th H) control proje t. The bm'n \Va built, \ itll tll h II and t'nc urngclllen t of Rauenhorst"s 'on , to all viat polluti n of earth , air, streams and lakes.

~ I R H, 1970

"\ wanted to point th way to an economic anti-pollution stmcture," the regent said.

"If th farm r can conomically proces or dehydrate "u ed grain" - what w call manme - and use it to grow another crop of grain, all people will gain economically in th end.

"But the a ribusines y terns of today make pollution profitable."

RauenllOr t him elf penalized, through greatl, increa ed property taxes, for building an anti-pollution tmcture while other profit-Oriented farmers all over

the country dump hea" application of chemical fertilizer, herbicide and pe ticid s onto the land, using farm practices that de troy both land and environm nt.

'The e practic are not ta\ed and in ffect the farmer is re' ard d for de tructi e way . . .

"While th chemicals are applied th~t de troy the land, water and air manure - the valuable by-product of the fe ding indu try - i regarded a waste."

Rauenhor t doe e not regard manure nor ludge, nor garbaa , as wast . His innovative feeding and anti­pollution bam for cattl is r ality. Hi ne, plans to utilize fli and other OIaani ms to r cycle waste are part of his continuou pm uit of method to deal with th growing problems of environmental abuse.

nd, if th plans ar realized on a large call.' th pollution control m asure and re ultant br-product utilization could well pread fellow hip throughout a pollut d world as growin populations realize the use of th ir countrie ' re ourc to atisfy mld upplem nt hwnan need.

Perhap you think that Ceorae Rauenhor t' id as and ,-i w ar contro\' r ial . . . h would agree. But, then 0 ar Ralph ad r' and Rachel ar on' .

MY CREED OF LOVE

Heirs good earth forever pure productive be saved When an idoled income has not you and me

enslaved Teach not " heri tage of guilt," true values profane Give stern hope so no just cause approach in vain Th anks to the past for its earned honor due To th is honor take heed that I no damage do Have lasting joy in no act or deed unclean Steal not th is joy, our misery by all be seen I live not a willful lie in selfish covet For children'S happiness I l ive, I love it

-George Rauenhorst

15

I i I~ I ..... I J ~

. . . ...

16

: ~ •. -~-. -,

I~ : POLLUTION II REPORT I.

---"f~CENTER I •

~: "., ~ / r. -- . I~f'. .. " I • ... -I •

. ~ t~:

•• . . ~

L 'I 1 E\

A student volunteer run-in Pollution Report Center (PRC) opened in the University's Coffman Union on January 26 to add encouragement to public involvement in the nation-wide Environmental Teach-In scheduled for April 22.

The Center 's functions include -• The receipt and investigation by PRC

volunteers of pollution reports. • Collection of pollution reports in order to

build files for use in informing lawmakers and the public of current environmental vi olations. Information gathered will be presented at the April Teach-In , and lists of pollution offenders will be published by the Center.

• Working with Students for Environmental Defense to create a " Polluter of the Month" award . Although the form of the award has yet to be determined it will be presented to the individual , company, institution or industry creating the most pollution in a month.

• Serving as an information center for people with questions about pollution laws, controls and effects. Pamphlets and reprints on val ious forms of pollution, city pollution ordinances, available speakers on pollution topics and bibliographies of printed matter concerned with pollution can be obtained at the Center.

• Providing " pollution complaint cards" to interested persons so that polluters may be reported to the Center by mail.

Karim Ahmed, co-chairman of the Environ­mental Teach-In committee whose 50 student members staff PRC, said that the Center receives 20 to 25 complaints and questions each day. Most questioners ask for general informa­tion , like what is the best way to dispose of garbage, or what kind of detergent is the least polluting. PRC has a roster of qualified personnel from the University available to answer questions as they arise. The Center 's telephone number is 373-0342.

The University itself is often reported as a pollution offender by callers , Ahmed said . Smokestacks and dormitory incinerators are cited in the student complaints.

The Center also receives its share of crank callers complaining about such things as " mind pollution" by newspapers.

" We listen to them. They' re just letting off steam," Ahmed, a research assistant in the University's department of laboratory medicine said . ' . For those just seeking basic general Information about pollution, the Environmental Research and Information Center (ERIC) , an offshoot of PRC, has also opened. Many high

r R H, 1970

school students doing term papers, among others, often visit the second Center's basement location in the Southeast Branch Library, 1222 Southeast Fourth Street. To accommodate their requests, ERIC has organized a library solely on pollution information . Many of the books, reports , magazines and pamphlets were obtained from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

Following through on pollution complaints by tak ing effective action to end them is the hardest part of PRC's job, Ahmed said. The Center has no way to punish polluters, but PRC reports are reaching interested lawmakers, alerting the leg islators to pollution problems and perhaps starting some leg islative act ion on controls.

Tom Griffin , the other co-chairman of the Teach-In committee , said that the activities of the University 's Festival of Life Week, of wh ich the Teach-In will be the highlight, are just the beg innings of the student attention which will be given to environmental issues. Bringing environmental matters to public attention, and offering proposals to legislators that are workable and that can be translated into political action are the aims of the Festival of Life Week. Griffin said that the allocation of the nation 's monetary resources is one of the main con­siderations to be brought before lawmakers.

The Teach-In is an attempt, Griffin continued to find " the highest common denominator of the ' people interested in problems of the environment and to see how much 'ecological conscience ' ' the community has."

The Teach-In is an attempt, he said to " move from nowhere to somewhere."

The pollution issue is not the only goal involve­ment of PRC. " It is a lifestyle that we are attacking ," Griffin said . " Environmental issues are a variation on the anti-war movement. Both the war and pollution are destroying our world .

" We are trying to get at the middle American way of life . These people are mostly too patriotic to be against the war, but this (the environmental issue) is someth ing that directly affects them - pretty soon they won't be able

(Continued on page 38)

17

THE FOCUS IS

INTERNATIONAL IN HOME ECONOMICS

"The clinwte of the times i international. More people are traveling, and even tho e u;ho do not travel outside of the United State ar ha ing increo ina oppoltunity to meet peopl from other countries.

"If our students and faculty are to be adequately preparecl to function, not only as professional working with va rious aspects of fa mil y concc1'llS, iJut also as informed citizen, we need to incorporate more emphasis of an intercultural-international nature in the programs and acti ities of our chool of Home Economics." - Dr. Louise tedmon director of the School of Hom e Economics

T HIS educational thru t outlin d b th niversity's director of the School of Home Economics is a logi al one during a p eriod wh n greater numb rs of our nation's student population arc rapidly achieving world itizenry.

It i ven more logical \ h n 01..1 consid r th pro­f ssional mpha is in hom e 'onomic .

Hom economics is long pa t the stag of major emphasis on hom making kill. It tudy, based on an under tanding of the balanc b etween man's natur as a 0 ial being and hi r lation to hi imm diat ph)' ical environment, requir s a great r knowl dg of th vast panoply of cultural patterns in th world and how they affect th value and actions of p eople, and an incr ased sensitivity to the n ed of cultural minor­ities h re and abroad.

'Without such cultural und r tanding, the hom economist of the future may b unabl to act upon 1 r apabiliti to add man' B h to his food sel ctions, ating patt ms, clothing, helter, hild raring and

family-int raction pattern . Th Univ rsit)' has long b en a pmti ipant in con­

tract proj cts abroad. It is r grettabl that the Scho 1 f Home Economics has not had tb opportunity to be in­cluded in major projects. In many of foreign d elop­ing ountries, along with increas d production th r is a s rious need to improv famil living in th e ar as of nutrition, housing and hild car .

D spit thi , th chool of Hom Economics has work d to appl)' its fa ulty, stud nt and communit r sour s to intercultural-intemational r sponsibiliti 'so

inc tb umm r of 196 , \Vb n the School launch ed a y ar-Iong program that focus d n internalional p -

18

lati n hip in hom onomi 'S, il h, s mad tr m n­dOll stride in thi ar a that arc almo t ph nom 'nal whel1 on 'on ider th ir funding and insufficient tim for r arch.

~luch of the choor~uccess i due to a facult \ ho is \ illing to pend their energi $ and oft 11 tlwir

wn mone in research abr ad while on 1 ave!> of ab­sence or att nding to pr f s iOll'l1 duti 's. TI1C')- h<1\ been building an internati nal program throliCTh in­dividual contacts whil at tl same tim aIl1mg ill-tructional information that b neBts da room work.

Dr. t dman, for one , ha trav led in s Ited Ollll­h'i throughout th world - ountries that often ,n the homelands of forcign shld 'nts attendin tlle ni­vel' it, - 0 tllat sh might as ('5 the ducati nal b ekgrounds of th . hldent and what opp rtuniti('s < wait th III \ h ' l1 th r ' turn . 1fan of th conlacts that sh ha mad in th Philippine~. Japan. Pakistan, Kor a India Gr ece ,nd Taiw, n were \ ith f reign tlldents who bad stu li 'd in tll ' cll 1 of Hom '

E onollli and now \ ork in a vari l\ of h m "0110-J1li!>t positi ns in til ir countri'$ as \\'('ll a \ ith Ilwri­can profe sionals abroad on spc ial assignm nt.

Th kl 0\ Ide thal sh' has ain d on th t.raining ,nd work of th hom e onomi t abroad comin ed h r of th n d for in r a cd intercultural-ml ' rna­tional programming at th ni rsil that would in­volve botll the native and the foreign tud nt.

Oth l' memb rs of tll ho r facult\, \ ho had travel 'd and l' ar h d 0 rsca al 0 r ~gnized tim n d. Th int rnational aspe t th \ er ubI to give th ir t a hing 11 cded to h [cu 1. The International 110m Economists ongr s wa growing and reach­ing throughout the world. PI' f ional and 11ol1prof $­

sional ommunit group sh \ d ontinual interna­tional int l' t and UppOlt for the ch 01.

Th Phi Up ilon Omi ron T\ in Citie alumnae \I IT

bringing foreign tud nt to th niver it~ campus and llpporting th m. v l' a p 'rioel of 7 ~ cars, th ) also spon or d a ries of inler- ultural s min< r on nutrition and hild 'are, taught by competent instruc­tors, to th wives of foreign men stud) ing at ~Iinnl'­sot, .

Th ' Hom E nOllli~ts in Business ( HEI Bs) help 1 a Danish stud nt, int re'ted in the h mE' onOllli t's rol in bllsinc s, gai n c\p 'rien t e wilh a local milling on pan . fl r h r turn d t D 11ll1ark, th ' ~ oung

'W

THE THREE PRIME MOVERS of the University' s School of Home Economics focus in intercultural-international involvement are, from the left, Dr. Margaret Doyle, associate professor in nutrition and food services; Dr. Louise Stedman, dean of the School; Dr. Gertrude Esteros, professor and chairman of the related rot d ivision of the School. Drs. Doyle and Esteros have served os chairmon of the current bag·lunch seminar program. Currently Dr. Doyle is one leave studying nutrition in Central and South America while at the some time seeking international involvement for her students. This coming summer Dr. Esteros will toke her closs in housing problems of the community obroad .

\\ oman (' ntinued to work with busin s group as \\ ,11 as maintaincd her contact with the :\Iinlle ota com­pan:.

The '\linnesota Hom Economists As ociation b'adi­tlOllall ' invite for 'ign student to their tat m ting so th '! mig! t know th "fhl\'or" of prof sionnl group.

As th 111 'ric an student ha\' crail ed mor and morc onla -t with th ir for ign cla mate, theil' in­terests to work, to tach, to h'a\, 1 abroad hay in­crca cd.

Th chool of Home E onomie ' acted to d \' lop a ~trong program, tlli'ough n propo' a1 for n ) ar' ~tud\, 19 -69, in hom eonol11i ' iut reultural-int r­national involvem nt, that wa. fund d into r alin b\ the ni\' rsit\' , ffi of lnt rnalional Program . ·Dr:.

crtrud E 't 1'0 and ~ !argar t o~' l ;:yed a 0 -

d1ail'man of th pr j t. Th tudy op 11 d with a UI11m r seminar dir ted

b) Dr. Dol' th~ Lee, noted ultural untlli' 1 logist, n the ultural diller 11e and ~imilaritie betwe n groups within the nit d tat and Otl1 r _ 0 i tie . Hom e onomi s fa u1t\ and graduate lud nt at­lended intl'nsi\ work l~op . (s~ions dming n 10-da) peri d that in )'('a 'cd their :\warl'Hl'S f the inter­cultural-int rnational nsp, ·t · thl'~ !ohou1d brincr to lh ir In r om t('a hing.

~ J R II, 1970

Th e ond phase of th year' tud\ \\'as an Octo­ber-l\'oYC'mber ' erie of lecture, enU;lar and tud\' t'. ion for nh'cr in facult\' and tud nt as well "

profe ional ,md nonprofe ionals from the larger com­munih who were con ern d with the well-b ing of familie. llt tandin \'i iting hohu- from thro{i h-out th world participated in th iO!.

leadina e .... 'Pert on nutrition in India Dr. Rajam­mal Dcvada" from the Homc iencl' olleg , oun­batort', India, \\', th f atured gue·t dUlina th Oc­tober m ('ting'. he not onh talked about family nutrition prOQ'ram in India. 'but a10 th chanltin~ role of women and intel'P r nal r l::ttion hip in the famili . ,md ommuniti of differ nt ulture , and th ir impli ation for int mational und r tanding, nut­rition re c,u-ch LUld xt Irion program .

Ir . Jean udrey"'iaht former Food and Agricul­ture rganization home economi t and curr nth' u­p lyi or

c

of home e onomi program in 21 Latin meri an unh'i, join d Dr. D \'ada. to di us

fo d and famil) ' li\'ing in India and outh , m lica. Th \'e111b r . ion., \\'hi h e"tend d into AI-

ri a, Europ and American min rit: group, em.pha­ized hOllsing and famil\' \'a1ue . :\1 1bourne Uni\'er­

sit~ 's rietjc '-\'an Rand ~, form r head of the Hou ing Di\'ision of the In titute f H 111 E onomie', . gri-

19

TWO SCHOOL OF HOME ECONOMICS FOREIGN STUDENTS are seen above odmiring a display of fore ign handicraft in the School 's facilities . Carol ine Ope ne, at left, is a gradua te student from Biafra who came to the Unive rsity two yea rs a go with two of he r country-women to pursue grad ua te work a fter they could not return to their country. Both she, a nd Misako Higa, right , a Japanese groduate stud e nt, ha ve worked in th e School ' s bag-lunch seminar program .

cultural University, vVagening n, th rlands, as well a noted American hom economi t and ~Iinn sota foreign stud nts lead th m ting.

These fall gathering p rm at d the community, th campus and the students as a sizeable number of interes ted people turned out to hear the p ak r , attend cia 5es and talk with for ign isitors and stud nts.

Th final phas of th year's study was the prepara­tion and publication of a special r 'port on the int r-cultural-intcrnational fo u in hom onomics at th University. Th report wa pr par d by vi iting on-ultant Kathl en Rhod s, prof sor of Hom Econo-

mics Education at e\ York tat 011 gc of Home Economics omell niv rsity.

"\V thought th at \ e should put together something 'oncret to sho\ the r suIt of our program," Dr. tedman told the Alumni cws. The r port is not onl oner t , but nlightening as w 11, and is s rving as a

nrm bas i for the growth of th ehool's int rnational programming.

Th r port clearly hows th nues that hom conomics' t aching, research and s rvi nterpris . hould follow to acbi ' ve strong r inter ultural-int( r­

national focus. And s v ral of ils recomm ndation bav aIr ady be n rcaliz d in th hool.

20

During th unent a ad 'mi ' 'ar, Ionda) nOOI1 bag-lunch s minars arc h ld at the chool that oil,,) for ign programs pI' nt d by ni I' it)' stafl and tuelents. " ince w ' do not have the 11 n 'y to bring

p opl in to peak w ar making us of ur a l1lpllS p r onn I," Dr. t dmun aid.

om of the pr s 'ntation ha c included Dr. Donald B neler, \ ho spent a car in ig ria on a ational

i n Foundation grant, p aking on 111 ri 'an v om n, Equality and Fre dom ; Homa mir-Fazli , an Iranian on th niversity starr, sp aking on condi-ti ns in Iran a th r late to wom n; and talks b\ Biafran at'oline p n and Japan e Ii ako Higo 0~1 the famili s' and women' po ition in th ir countries.

Th chool has al 0 introdu d n \ internationalh ­orient d cour work and has stabli h d machin n to fulBll th r qu sts of both fa ulty and tud nts f;r an quival nt of a quart r's work in internation.l1 stuel .

Two chool of Hom E on mi student. went, thi \ inter quarter, to Dr. D vadas' coll ge in India to tud),. Both \ r in olv din la t ear' int rnational program . Both ar living in coll ge quarters and acb r eeived $500 from Phi pilon Omi ron fo r a i ' tancl' on travel xpens s.

Dr. Gertrude Est ros, prof or and chairman of th r latcd art division of th chool, has develop d an \\ cours in housing that h had pr ' pat-ed for dming a quarter's I av of abscnc \ h n b trav I d in Iran, India and Japan to tud 1 t d hou iug xaJl1pk~ . Thi ummer he plan to tak h r lass abro, d to stud hOUSing probl m of th ommuni~ in II ,I inkL

openha cr n and London. Th la i not funded. individual enrolling in it ar payin their 0\\ n wa) .

Dr. Do Ie, as 0 iat prof or in nutrition and fo d ervi , i urrentl on I a to tudy nutrition in entral and ollth m ric ,a well a to ek inter­

national involvement for her stud nt . TIU'ough h('1' p rsonal onta ts sh hope to di cov r fea ibl tu­d nt p roj cts aboard.

Y t a third memb r of th working on a r gional proj ' xtcnd int rnationally, plan to stu 1

n erica in th near futur .

CtUl

outh

In the Twin iti . mmunit), other prof i nal groups such as Hom Economists in Hom >makin g and th ' ~Iinnesota utrition oun il upp rt th 'hool of Home Economics in it int rn, tion al a'orts, \\ hil l'

Iii 1 sota alumnae working abroad:.1r formin cr plans for niv r it stud nt parti ipation in in t rnational home on0011 s workshop .

Th School of IIom E n mics through individual initiati and th d t rmination t a hi ve and d int r 1Iltural-int rnalional program d spit certain ob­stacl , is ex t nding th opporluniti s for it tudL'nts to study for ign 'ultur 's on mnpu and ov rsea ' \ hile maintaining a strong liaison with it foreign stuclents and commul1i l llpport rs.

Football, that sport which requires perfection of the body and dexterity of the mind, that pastime which reigns supreme, that recreation which is the youngest of the greater major athletics, is played by the " Giants of the North" with skill and sportsmanship that is unsurpassed.

THE ALL-TIME GOPHER TEAM S NOW and ice have covered the gridiron arenas of Big Ten Football since it began its one hun­dredth year of sports spectacular in 1969. Yet, as the cover is beginning to melt, alumni and the fans ' memories of those first hundred years are yet strong , though their minds are thinking ahead to the 1970 season that will open the second hun­dred years of collegiate football.

As part of the commemoration of that first one hundred years of intercollegiate rivalry , alumni and friends of the Big Ten schools balloted , in­dividually, to choose their All-Time Team and AII­Time Great Football Player.

The University of Minnesota's ballots have been counted , cast by Minnesota alumni and fans of the Maroon and Gold from the Atlantic to the Pacific coasts of the United States. And the Alumni News is proud to announce the All-Time Gopher Football Team and the All-Time Great Gopher Football Player for those first one-hundred years of sports ' competition - as you have chosen them .

Ballots were made available by the University of Minnesota Alumni News, University football pro­grams and the Rochester (Minnesota) Post-Bulle­tin , edited by alumnus Charles H. Withers '49BA Journ .

The Golden Gopher players who made the AII­Time line-up span almost two decades of excite­ment and color on the Minnesota gridiron .

And some of the alumni voters could not resist commenting on their ballots :

" (I) have seen all of the above (list of Minnesota consensus All-Americans) play except McGovern and Baston."

" I will have to slight the lads from 1909 to 1916, before my time! Have seen games since 1923."

" The All-Time Great is impossible to choose! " " Please let me add the name of Bernie Bierman

to coach this (All-Time) team." " Good Lord , man, no one can leave Bobby Mar­

shall out at end! " The tally for the All-Time Great Gopher Player

was over-whelmingly for the " Nag". And alumni commented that he could " play any position super­latively" or " was best at fullback."

Another said that if he " had a choice for second All-Time Great, it would be Johnny McGovern ."

Yet another alumnus said of a defensive tackle

I R II, 1970

who ranked th ird as the selection for the All-Time Great Gopher Player - " Bobby Bell made Minne­sota defense exciting. "

A Minnesota alumnus known for his vast play­by-play knowledge of Gopher Football throughout years of compet ition and one who has authored books on the Golden Gophers, wrote :

" There should be some sort of award for a guy like Pug Lund. He didn 't have the tools to be a great kicker or passer, but performed those jobs well along with his great power runn ing and tre­mendous competitive spirit. As the player who played up to every bit of his potential and talents, there was none greater. "

And he added that the " greatest Gopher team has to be the 1934 Gophers."

An outstand ing Minnesota player was among those who voted.

Clarence " Biggie" Munn , 1931 All-American guard and currently coach of the East Lansing Michigan State Big Ten team , not only is noted as a player during his collegiate years - showing the versat i le talents of an excellent offensive guard, team punter and strong passer - but also as a Hall of Fame coach carrying Coach of the Year honors.

Munn 's ballot for the All-Time Gopher Team named Baston and Larson at ends ; Munn , Widseth , Nomellini , Tonnemaker and Wildung as linemen ; and Nagurski , Lund, Daley and Franck at the back positions. Nagurski was Munn 's choice as the AII­Time Great Gopher Player.

Along with two other Minnesotans, " Biggie" Munn was named to the Football News All-Time All-American Team in 1969. The second Golden Gopher was Ed Widseth , 1936 All-American tackle, of whom Football News said :

". . . he quickly caught the eyes of the (Min­nesota) coaches. It wasn 't so much that he weigh­ed over 230 pounds and was e tremely strong : it was his very quick start and unusual speed for his size . As a sophomore, he immediately moved in as a strong first tackle across from Phil Bengston, present Green Bay Packer coach and along with All-American guard Bill Bevan and All-American end Butch Larson.

" This was the 1934 team , considered the great­est in Minnesota history, and still nationally refer-

~1

red to as about the most powerful team ever on the field. The following year, he and fellow tackle Dick Smith, both made consensus All-American the only time one team dominated the tackle posi~ tion in one year. These were the peak years of coach Bernie Bierman and his Golden Gophers. The team hadn 't lost since 1932."

And the final Minnesotan named to the Footbail News All-Time Team was - inevitably - Bronko Nagurski :

" It cannot be said of many men of sports that their names became a part of our American lan­guage, but this can be said of Bronko Nagurski. Even today, 40 years after his collegiate career and 26 after his last Chicago Bears game, his name is used to mean colossal strength, inhuman power and reckless propulsion , a Neanderthal ani­malism against mere Cro-magnons. When some scribe writes about the legends of this game, he will devote chapters to th is man. Even today, in his mid-60's, he is a huge hulk, neckless, with long sinewy arms and meathooks of hands . . . "

The " Nag 's" honors have been many, through­out his sports career, and after his retirement. He is not only the All-Time Great Gopher Football Player , but also won a position on the All-Time Gopher Football Team.

Your All-Time Gopher Football Team - as you chose the players - includes in its line-up, and showing their years of play for the University of Minnesota, is :

End End Lineman Lineman Lineman Lineman Lineman *Back Back Back Back

Frank (Butch) Larson Bert Baston Bronko Nagurski Leo Nomellini Bobby Bell Clayton Tonnemaker Ed Widseth Bruce Smith (deceased) Paul Giel Francis (Pug) Lund Herb Joesting (deceased)

1932-33-34 1914-15-16 1927-28-29 1946-47-48-49 1960-61-62 1946-47-48-49 1934-35-36 1939-40-41 1951-52-53 1932-33-34 1925-26-27

All -Time Great Gopher Football Player - 8ron­ko Nagurski.

According to the balloting , the second team would include, at the end positions, Aaron Brown and Ray King ; at the lineman slots, Carl Eller, Clarence (Biggie) Munn, Bud Wilkinson , Dick Wi 1-dung and Tom Brown ; at back positions, George Franck, Johnny McGovern, Bronko Nagurski and Sandy Stephens. There was a tie between Bruce Smith and Paul Giel as first runner-ups for AII­Time Great Gopher Player.

They are all men , who one Minnesota alumnus wrote , " could play two or more positions in the All-American style! "

22

ALL·TIME GREAT GOPHER FOOTBALL PLAYER Bronko Nagurski is said to have bee n discovered by Minnesota Coach Doc Spears when he lost his way in the country and stopped to ask a farm boy for directions. After that boy pointed th e way with his plow, Spears brought him to the University .

Bronko was not strictly a fullback . In his three years at Minnesota he played end, fullback on offense and tackl e on defense . His reputation was greatest for his tackle ploy and he reached All -American status in that position . One of the All -American se lections during his collegiate years put him at both tackle and fullback on a 10-mon team - the first and only time any player was honored in this way .

His two greatest games are said to have been against Notre Dome in 1927 and Wisconsin in 1928 .

Bronko hit the Notre Dome fullback so hard in the 1927 game that he fumbled the boll . Minnesota recovered, and three ploys later passed for a touchdown and eventual 7-7 tie .

In the 1928 Madison contest Bronko started at fullback against the Badge rs despite the two fractured vertebrae he hod suffered in a gam e the week before . He carried the boll five out of six tim es from the Badger 17-yard line to lead the Gophers to a 6-0 win that cost Wisconsin the championship . And , on defense, Bronko knocked down a pass in the end zone that would have tied the score for Wisconsin , if not given them th e victory.

Said to be th e only professional played who ron his own interference, Bronko achieved instant fame as fullback for the Chicago Bears and was th e most feared inside runner in the pro game.

EvV

YOUR UNIVERSITY ...

Infant care

to save

more lives

THE UNIVERSITY'S deportment of pediatrics recently " christened" on intensive core word that will use Innovative methods and equipment to provide the best possible core to critically ill infants. Here a nurse cores for a baby housed in on incubator that reproduces the environment of the mother's womb.

1A1 H, 1970 .....

TUBES FROM AN oxygen humidifier hong in the

foreground of a maze of medical equipment used in the

pediatric intensive core unit. Infant core technicians are

being trained on-the- job to operate the equipment and to

help ease the nursing shortage .

24

A w. rd SP ' 'iaIl) dcsi rned to lreat infants" ilh lif -thr at 'nin dbeas s and tho b rn pr matur I)

opened at ni er it)' Hospitals in Februar '. Thi pediatric intensive car' unit, 'quipped with a omputer monitoring st'l11 that \ at·h, pati nt 2.t

h ur a da , ha innovation \ hich mak it uniqu ' in the nation.

Dr. nrl Hunt, th unit' - h 'ad ph),sician said that th re ha b en no infant intensiv car faciIi in tIl

tat of igni.fieant iz until now. Th ni r it . unit ha b n de ign d to pro id b th

high quality and a high quantity of ar for babi born bcfor t rm or \ ho ha heart and lung di a h aid .

D dicated to till purpo , the int n iv car taff provid th a ut 1) ill infant with th mo t

modern car , in addition to riving constant edu ation in caring for til s hildr n whil providing a ba e for infant ar re earch.

n entir p diatries \ ard \ a torn apart and con ert d to form th , inten i ar unit at a co t of ab ut $115,000.

[0 t of th ni ersit ' IIo pitals' money was p nt on "thing that woulel di!' ctl, b n .fit th pati nt, rath I' than put into thing lik b autifu] walls," Dr. H nr Sauls, a si tant prof $sor of p cliatrics and unit planner, aid.

tilizing til n w Jl1 elieal equipm nt a ailabl n th ward, urgeon and p diatri ian work tog th l'

to av th Ii of hildren who ar "e s ntiall)' d ael < t th tim of admi sion," Dr. 'ott B n n, L p diatri l' iel nt physi ian who work on th wurd, aiel. But th ompl x panopl), of n w 111< chin s is alwa s and only a modern 111 clieal aid and n t a subtitut for th do tor and nul'

um rou confer nee w r h Id with train d inten iv car nurses to g < I' th ir effort in th unit to th gr ate t fficiene), in medi < 1 and nUl' ing ar Dr. B nSOI1 not d that a major adv, utag of tb n \ unit is it ontinuit f care, that is, ha ing on indi idual ntircly rsp nsibl for til program of pati nt care and the trninin f intern and r . id nl in su 'h car.

Th car' c li n for infants

mol' d n anding chor '5. Th eomput 'I' i a dey 10pnPIltal t 01 , monitoring th inf.nt pati nt" h artb at, bloo 1 pI' ssure and OtIl rvital igns from b dside unit. It has I t to b uliliz cl to it full m di < 1 apabilili ; but \Vh nth omputer i , it will PI' vid minut -b -minnt a ount of th pati nt' plioI' physi 'al con lition and ital sign) a \ 11 as , eh cluling patienl n ('(Ii 'ali n n lh basis of cl tors' programming.

noth l' "fir t" in II int 11 i of 0 1'h < d iling 0luI11l1 lhat

unit i tile tU' to)' quipm nt

L MINE

for 1>1 d transfu~ions and gcn rall11 di al care that would oth rwis tak up aIuabI · flo r pac wh n not in u , Dr. auls said.

E n th \ all co lor of tJ \ ard, \i hi h i off-\ hit , was sp 'cially s · Ie t ·d to pre ('nt th > illusion of skin coJor chang ' , p 'iallighting wa abo imtall d for lh • sam r <15on.

Indoor-outdo r carp ting in blu -gr 'en , cover th A ors in th pati nt caJ" area of Lh mit. Th ·arp ting not oni reduc S th nois lev I and pro\'id s a b tt r walking surface for a busy t< II, but is al 0 asier to kccp cl an than 1110r> common til Ooors. ons quentl" thc ward is 1110r sanitar) .

11 th young pati nt kept on thi ward ne d around-th -clock care - and the pr ' nee of an on-dut) ph)' ician at all tin es , nurse Rita Korman aid . . \ sp cial b droom for doctors \ a built into th ward so that tllC) are alway on the pr mi . Th infant' condi tion an oft n chang uddenly. ~lrs. Korman aid, and th re is not alway tim to call < nd wait

for a d tor to om. . everaJ conference room that ar u. d for tudent

cIa! . fnciliti or in \ hich ph) icians talk to th par nt of children on th ward, are au 0 part of th unit. nd, a the unit g t more patients, mor and mor of it pa 'e will b turn d over to palient car facilitie , \I rs . K rman aiel.

D 'spit its futuristi ni\'er ity' J1( \ P dialri s inten i are unit mu t fun tion under-staff ' d . Th ideal nur e-to-pati nt ratio for this \ ard is on to tw , but presently only 10 pati IltS can b accom1l1 dat d at ilii level. Th \ ard' apa ity is 1 t 2 patient.

Dr. II lint aid that although thi taff horta e i part of a nation-wid nur e d 'Rci nt, a new health profession ma) originat ' from tl1e 5h Itage. ni\' l' ity lIo~pitah \ ill be amon the Er~t to train "infant carc t 'hnician" - p r onn 1 qualifi<.'d to tak o\'er som of th routine work of tJl regi t r d and pl'a ·ti al nul' e, ueh a ' laki ncr puis 5 and blo d PI'" ur \ ith th mod rn e luipmcnt u cd in th infan t \ ard. n on-th -job trainin g pr gram for the tcdlllieinn should gradually a e th taff hortag , hn ing more timc for the nurs ~ t PI' \'id pati nt with sp eializ d medi a1 ar .

A big problem fa ( 1 by planll( rs f the new unit wa. ho\\ to let out-state ph)' i ian kn \\ ab ut thE advan 'cd fa iliti . ther cl partm nt in th ~r Ii al

'hool ha\'c s nt taH 111 mb ' r Ollt into th tat to l'elu ate d 'lors on the lat t tc hniqu ' f patient car<.', and tJl p diatrics d partmenl 111<1) al 0 clo so t s I\'e its pI' bl 111, Dr. Hunt . aid.

"\ Vbat we w uld like to do is cr ut to th \'ariou eomm lmit) h spitals that ar int res ted in hadng liS

come. \\' (; wouldlik lo tall-. ,b ut pI' blctn. f n \Vb rns ho\ to h. ndl the initial al' f tJl i k n \Vb rn, and talk ab ut \\ hEn would b th appropriat lim 1 lran. fer lhes babi' t a)' ferral enter . u h a' Ul's."

r-. r R II, 1970

CEILING COLUMNS CONTA IN equipment necessary for the intensive core unit's operation . A ratio of two patients for every nurse is desirable for optimal patient core. The stoff is highly treined and constantly busy keeping watch over their tiny patients, as seen above .

SURROUNDED BY EQUIPMENT, on intensive care unit staff member cares for a premature baby. Infants are handled as little as possible to keep from overta ing their limited strength.

By Medical Microscope Fund Booste

St. Paul Ramsey Medical Foundatio

DR. HUGH MONAHAN, post president of the University's Medical

Alumni Association and on the "stoff" of the St . Paul Ramsey Foundation,

accepted a check for $5,000 in behalf of the Medical Microscope Fund from Roger Miles, executive director of the St. Paul Ramsey Medical Educational

Research Foundation.

W HE a student b gin hi medical tudi at the nivcrsit)', or an)' oth ' r ehool, he is confronted

with on ' major bill aft r ~ll1oth r. On of th largest of th se is some 600 h mu t find in hi po k t for a mi ro cop.

Th student rna use th mieroscop for two ),ears, and then di po e of it, or h rna k cp it. How r, it has b n timated that less than 10 per ' nt of today"s pra ti ing ph si ian still u e th micros op th )' had as student.

To h Ip ase thi financial burd n on th fr hman-sophomor J11 dieal ·tud nt, th niv r it, ' M dica! lumni Asso iation b gan a pecial proje t -the M di al 1icr scop Fund - in an effort to rais ' approximatel $200,000 to provid a suppl of good-quality micro cop for n ed), medical stud nts.

This samc nlv rsity group had ju t finish d th 'onstruction of the $100,000 niv ' rsity Ho pital '

J11 dieal stud nt add t urn " 1 'n th d cid d to launch the fedieal ii ro op Fund.

The r spons to th ir " ork with the stud nt add t urn had be 11 0 trong from stat phy ician that the)' didn't want to 1 t it lap ; 0 th alUlllni sought a worthwhil project that \ ould ontinuc th II"

pr vious shldent-ori ntation. R sponse to th Nli 'ros 'op Fund, wh n it \ as anooun d, wa ­instantan ons and tr 01 ndolls, from th alulllni 111 mb ' rship, from indi idual ph i ian thro Ighout the tat and from pri at or anization .

26

n pri at' organizatiOl , 10 'c.'l allied \ itb tlw statc' gro\ ina h 'alth sci '11' program as \ 11 a~ that of th Univcr it\ , i th t. Paul Ham '\ J\lccheal E lucational Re arch F undati n. Th oUlldatioll gay th ~Ii ro cop Fund a bi boo t with a 'h('-k for $5,000 - enough for thc pureha of 10 . op '~,

Th t. Paul Ramsey FOLlll lation is interc ted in th Ii roscop FUl1d be au the) ar int'r' ted ill medical cdu ation, an I "putting ur mOll ) \ h IT

it will do th 1110 t good, ill ur opinion," a rding to Executiv Dir et r I og r rile.

n obje tiv of th Foundation i t aid indi\ idunls se king a \1l dical cdn 'tHion. Th ir ubstantial donation to the ~ Ii roscopc Fund und rlin d this obj tiv .

Though hous d in th n 'w t. aul Ram e Hospital, tl1i ' Foundation i not a br< n h of th in ·titution whi h i on of th Iliv r itv' t a hing hospitals, but is a 'pat'at ntit) , joil{ed in pmpo \ ith a ho -pita! to nrich and provoke mcdical r 's arch and cdll ational programs, Th ' FoundatiOl was incorporated in D mber 1966, and op rat d on L mall-seal \' it] fllnd from th H 'a rt

ss ciation, p rsonal donations and m 111 riaL , unti l J anuar 196 .

Toda th Foundation r 'aches into a numbcl of h '<lIth fi Ids , in it (fort to Illeet th' n ds f L 11 llH' phy i ian \ ho ha 'om' log ·th r to PL rti ipat in its work. Th Founclati n's staff inclucl - 40 full-tim ' physicians h wing a hug' vari t) of

m di 'al int r sts, a w II as an additional 150-200 part-tim personnel who participat through the organization in som m nn r, in hospital or Foundation programs. bout 75 to 0 individual form the: core: working group of tb Foundation, and it is th ir council and wish s that gUid and prompt action.

The majorit) of the Foundation's funding come from th practic of m dicin - th ph) icians who participat full-time ar affiliated, ith th > Foundation through ontractual arrang m nt to work in its group pra tice of m cHcin - and local health and governm '1 t gran tin a ourc .

The latt r ag nci ,such as the Hart S ociation or the meriean ancer oci h , hav ' ask d the

t. Paul Ham e\ Foundation to work on om' pmti ular a Pt'~t of rear ·h, providing ne e ary funding for ueh work. The Tational III titute of Health bas al 0 given moni to th Foundation for ~p 'cuk research.

Although t. Paul Ram ) Ho pita] ma) hou the ph) 'ician imolved in r arch a ti\itie , and thu b, consider d the principal site of il1\ e:tigation, mall) of th se medical III n hold appointment not onh at t. Paul R,ll1l y, but also at th niv l' ity and oth~r h pital5. The ~ons quentl) use th re a'rch lahoratOl;cS and III r ophi ti uted fa iliti at the

niverit\ and otb r r eareh site for th ir work. Th , Foundation do not cmpha ize an) particular

area of re ar h nOr doe it hav a "pet proj ct"; rath r, it i involved in a number of l' ear h acth'iti '5 and will li ten to anyon oming to it "with a b ,tt I' mou e-trap , anting . upport," according to liles.

"' V, ar in a po ition now, that if our patticipating ph) sician got together in a ne\\ proj ct ",hi h th y pr mot d enthusiasticall), th ) would probabl) g t 111 re four att ntion than someon el e. Ho\\' \' r, th re would b no rank bia , b aLL e tht' memb I' of Our admini trative com mitt hay a v t'\' broad orientation and repr 5 nt well th ' Ill die .. il diH r n among all f our p<uti ipant - from tho e phy i ian invol cd in m eli al d partment ,pri,'at pm tiee, tea hing on all I v ,1 or r ear h."

Tb' \'oluntary work of both the re af hand administrati\'e ~ommittee of the Foundation ha mnintaim'cl a balan e in it proje t , and the rc car h committct, in a ' ''r) r al ' tnse, en huge. tlll:' ,lclministrativ committe .

Thi rty-sh: F undation pllrticipant · sit on tllC resear·h e 111m ittee, inclueling h 'pital worker . The committcc s Ii its application ' [1' tl1 a\lyon inlcJ'cste 1 in pursuing n projl' t that is rl'iatl'cl to

~ I \ R II, 1970

medicin : from doctor , di tician , nur e or worker in a ho pitallaundry. Although th t. Paul Rams y Hospita] staff ha an insid track to th Foundation becalls of it h adqllart r5 in the hospital buildin th r arch committee has alway been affable to ou id proj ·t .

Research r que t come into the committee that r{'vi ws that th m, ranks th m as to re earch importance and th n forward th m to tb admini5trativ eomrnitt .

The admini trative committee, char ed ,\ith th da) -to-day manag m nt of th Foundation and compri d of fiv lect d r pr entativ of th total participm t group, allocat fundin for re earch proj cts and pa their recomm ndations on to the Foundation' board of tru tee for final revi "',

If th Foundation i ound d for upport of an ducational or outside project, uch as tll ni\' r it) ,

~[edical ~licro cope Fund, th admini trati\' eommitt handl the initial reque t. Thi committ also acted on th upport of th niver ity' di5ad,'antag d m dical tudent pro ram. In total a r ment' ith the niver it) ' educational concept, tllE' Foundation today upports an indi\iducu pre-m clieal tudent with th additional funds h ha r qu t d for hi education.

Th t. Paul Ram , ~I dical Edu atiolHu R a1' h Foundation b nefit , consequ ntly. not only it h adquatter ho pital, but al 0 th Uni\' r it)-. the tate and th ' nation throuah it r t'~ueh and ducational work. It ha ponsored a elie of eminars howing a

broad approach to po t-graduat m diein that invol\'ed p ople from Ba)lor ni,' r it)', org to\\l1 Uni 'el it\ and Ha1'\,at·d a wcll a tlH:' "[ niver ih' of ~linn Ot~l. nd th FOI.mdation ha r >ached into alIi d h altll fields with funding for pil t tudie in new fi eld of alli d h alth care, a ' wclJ a pI' -111 di al ,md medi al trainin .

Tluouah its a gre ive r up of participatina ph) i ian, tlle F undation h , a hie" d \igorous growtll in tlle pa t two year, de pite tll dry-up of f ,d ral funding that ha held it ba k from work in on-going proj t. In mo t f it pi! t pr gram . it has ' rvcd a ' a fi · al agent. .. e ding" mon )' into a 'ingle proj t rath r th~Ul ontinuina proQ'}:am in

111 ( di al h altll , Y t it dedication to on- oing upp rt i e n in it

donati n t th 11.i" er it, '. :\Iedi al :\Ii r cop Fund and it- work with di ad,,'antag d medi al tuden .

Tb :\1 di al ~li 1'0 ope Fund, < f Janu,uy 1970. had pur ·ha ed 37 miero!> Pl'S and showed a total

( ontillllt'c1 011 page ~9)

28

DAVE SHAMA'S I GOPHER

TALES T he first time I met Gopher center Larry Mikan I was suspicious. He had this image as a spoiled kid .

His dad was Mr. Basketball and George saw to it that Larry never went hungry. Hunger pangs were as foreign to him as speed must have been to Mary Baker Eddy.

His first two seasons at the University Larry wheeled around campus in a fancy sports car and might as well have been on a racing scholar­ship for his contribution to Gopher basketball.

Then came a man named Bill Fitch to coach Gopher basketball. Bi ll Fitch knows about hunger pangs, he knows nothing about sports cars.

He took one look at Mikan and knew there

L I EWS

was going to be trouble . He also knew that he had a great player if Larry would play with the desire of a boy from Fitch 's side of the tracks.

Last year was Mikan 's jun ior season in eligibility, but in reality he was only a freshman . He was to learn that Fitch expects 100 percent effort for three hours on the basketball floor seven days a week.

At first he didn 't get an hour. " Mikan !" Fitch would scream. " Move, Larry," he wou ld Implore.

The yelling was so loud that it 's rumored President Moos had to close his door in Morrill Hall.

At times Mikan closed his, too. He would su lk and wonder why Fitch picked on him.

Fitch had an answer. " Because Larry Mikan could be as great as

any of the outstanding basketball players of the 1960's. The Bill Bradleys, Cazzie Russells, etc. Larry could play with them."

It hasn 't been easy on Fitch or Mikan , but the transition of the Gopher cente r into a truly top player is unfolding. You won 't read of Mikan making any all-American teams and he may not be all-Big Ten , but Fitch knows he has something special.

" I'd be a fool to tell you Mikan is as good as he's going to be," he said, " but right now he's the most underrated pro prospect in the country. He has all the physical ability to be an outstand­ing pro. He can be as good as he wants to be."

That's a lot of compliment, but the facts bear Fitch out. Mikan has led the Big Ten in rebounding for most of the year and averaged over 17 points per game.

At 6-8 there are few college or pro forwards who have his quickness and jumping ability.

" His mobility and agility allow him to do things that George never thought of," Fitch said.

And so it must be as Fitch says, as far as he wants to go. I know that he wants to be a great player.

Four years later I no longer regard him with suspicion. He's a nice person who has learned that there are such things as wood sheds and scolding individuals. And when used properly they can make for better people and players.

" I know that at times I ve pouted some in games and practice," Mikan said . " But I do care about the team and improving my game. I want to make it in pro basketball. I think I can."

Whether or not he does will be a reflection on how much he 's changed. He 's come far enough now so that no one should doubt that he could do it.

" Larry 's made progress, ' Fitch said . " I can say he's a competitor. I COUldn 't always say that. "

Chalk up another racing car driver missing . This one, however, wasn 't lost, he was saved.

1 R II, 1970

MEDICAL MICROSCOPES ..•

of S11,139.10 in its treasury. The only co t to the tuden t rec iving the us of a Fund micro cope for

hvo year is. 25 - for maintenanc and cl aning at the nd of hi t rro of use.

Both tud nts and upporting ph)' icians and organization have benefi tted from parti ipation in th I dical i\ licroscope Fund. Th donor have respond d vi orously b cause th y id ntify with th tr mendou co t of a medical ducation, bein m dical m n them elve , and th tud nt are nthu iastic and grateful, as ho\\'n in the letter that

th v continually writ to the donor who e name ar affi~ d to the n'licroscop .

Th n cd for funding th ~Iicro cope Fund will be \'en gr ater in the futur with the advent of the

disadvantag d m dical student program, th proj cted incrcas in th number of doctor n eded to fulfill th d mands of the tate' health car n ds, and with the w ar and tear on th original micro cope purch d.

Th ·ni\· r it\' and th tate hay alwa\' been tron ly medically-orient d; Ie i lati\'e upport prove

thi . Th ~ I dical ~Iicro cop Fund is well worth upportin ,as evidenced by th t. Paul Ram ey ~Iedical Educational Re arch Foundation' aid.

WHY DO MORE PEOPLE SAVE AT F&M THAN ANY OTHER PLACE IN TOWN?

HERE'S WHY: o High interest on savings

o Low cost home loans, home improvement loans, savings account loans.

o Service since 1874

o Minnesota 's only mutual savings bank.

F&M~ FARMERS AND MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK OF MINNEAPOLIS Sixth and Marquette / Telephone 339·2515 M EMBER FEDERAL. DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORAnON

MRS . JEAN LeVANDER KING Daughter of M innesota 's Governor

30

SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT HAS RECORD SUCCESS

Th niv rsit ' lunma lub brought th color, ound and brightn ss of pain to 410 alumna and gu t at th ir e nth nnual

hampagn T a and F . hi on R -u on F bruar 7 in down to, n

~ linn apoli . Fa hiOI b), Roy H . Bjorkman

highlighted th cong nial b n fit for th Alumna cholar hip Fund for Freshm an \Vom n, and mpha-iz d th linne ota lumni s­ociation' Mar b tour to p ni b ~lallorca.

The mod is - faeull', wiv s. alunma and cort - di pla) ed with r e and mil s Bjorkman' color panorama of Pant omania Globe Trotting F a bion , umm r­time, Goodlooking loth e , Party Tim and F abulou Furs, and Li -mandt' "mod" fashion for men.

Irs . ~ ral olm Moo , wif of the niversity presid nt, and III's.

Jam R , wu of th a istant d an for tudent affairs, l' present­ed th fa ul ty wi a mod 1 for tb vent. Iumna mod 1 includ­ed Irs. B tty Barnhart lapp, 1952 ~Iinn apoli quat nnial Qu n; ~[r . u Kumpf 0 , T P l' onal­ity and mod 1; Mrs. J <11 L Vand r 'King, daught I' of ~linn ota's ernor L and 1'; 11's. L

etch 11 Lind trom ; Ii nl1 Patte; [rs. J Vll Hultgr n P n-nock, wif of ~1 b ard m mber; Mrs. J eann tt Ridlon Pi card,

IA board m mb l' and 0 winn r; Mr . J an hay, presid nt of th nology lumni Marcia R ai 1 t ,an on, , if th G neral oll 'g Alun ni 0 'i­ation pI' sid nt and dau gl t ' I' of the M x cutivc director; Mrs. Al n H ustad Watson, ,if of th e ~ 1 pre idcnt and daughl r f a past

1 pre icl nt, rthu r Hustad. W aldo E. H ard 11, 1 pa l

pr sident, an 1 J III' I . Wri ht,

1970 ~Iinn ' ota football captam, wel" the mal , ·or .

mong th man) pecial tables r seI'V d for the vent was that for

lumnae pa t pI' sid nts. Dr. Lil­lian Fink, ~Irs. ~l a ' Findl c\ , \1iss

ecilia leI 0 11 ~li s arol) n ll ­

d rson, ~lrs . ~laJian rling, , Ii s h elle Kr idbcrg, ~lr . Zoe grov , ~Irs . iol t Graf and

irginia B ·btoI. \\ er ' all pres nt for th ' gala afternoon .

~I Ex cutive Director Ed Haisl t ho t d < m n' tabl that included niversity Pr sid nt ~l al­

colm ~ loos, nh dr itv ic Prc l­dent tanl ') J. We~lb rg, \1 .\

(COlit inll l.'d Oil 1Jag 38)

MRS . ANN HUSTAD WATSON Wife of MAA President and daughte r of past MAA President

L 1 I

MRS . JEANNETTE RIDLON PICCARD MAA Board member and OAA winner

MRS . MALCOLM MOOS Wife of University President

\1AR II, 1970

THE UNIVERSITY Family Practice Department Seeks Supply of IINormal1l Patients

propo al for upplyin "normal" pati nt to th nh'er ity' Bed­line; d partm nt of famil) practice and community h alth was di cus -cd r centh bv th Board of Re­gent.

Th probl m of finding a upply of pati nt exist at th becaus the majority of patient r f rr d to

niv r it)' Ho pital for treatment hay > unusual di ease or complica­tions, r qUll1.na th pecialized knowledge of the Ho pital " hi hI) train d phy icians, In th d palt­ment of family practic . th pro-p 'ctiv Jo tor n d to work with

a mor normal patient roup to pr par for b comin family ph;: i­ian in ou tate, rural ar as and mall town .

Two option hay b n pr nt­d to th R g nt , po ibiliti

for curin pati nt , with qual [01t to b giv n to both :

( 1) Th t.mdard f -for- ni pr gram. whereby patient who n­roll pa: r gular fee for what \' r er\'i and treatm nt th \" r-

guire, u ing thcir pr ent in t~'anc to r pay tho e xpen e ;

(2) Pr paid group imuran e for indi\idual or famili , who would th n r iv all their m dical r-vi at th ni\' r ity' Health ei-enee ent r. This 'opti n, alled th \ IiIUl ota Famih HaIth Plan, would b o11ere I t1~rol1gh \. ral insuranc ompanie - to mplo)' e of bu inc firm. It would includ pI" v llti\'c 111 dieal ar u h a im­munization and ph) i al xam_ and ut-patient tr abnel t a \\' 11 as h pitalization at Universit\ II pita.L . '

Al pro\.imatei) 100 individual r famih unit hould be e nfrontcd b) ('~'('r) £amil) -pm ti n:. ident

at th Uni\' rsit\ '. II a.lth ent r.

In addition to the tandard in­di\idual family units, the depart­ment also hop to moll member from OYer-65 m mb r of th fam­ilie in th b a ic population group, r id nts of nearb,' housing for the elderl\', and n \\, ' member~ of the

niy 'r it)' faculty after July 11. The fir t two group pre umably would be CO\· r d by ~Iedicare ~Iedicaid, \\'h r as th'e last oup could choo either of th options.

Center for Youth Studies Established

:\ Youth De\" lopment nt r h< b en e tabli h d at the Univ r it\' that will mak exi tin informatio~ about youth availabl ,md tUlder-tandabl for tho e ,,·ho work \\ith

youna p ople. The center, which do not hay

fin :meial upport as ;: t , ion of the nter for

Regional Affair ( fu ). nd r the dire tor hip of Prof -or C' ela Konopka. coordinator for CRA and a p ial asi. taut to Yice Pr -id nt for tudent Affair Paul ea h­man, it will cr\"(~ to briner to th r knowl dae and '1...ills fr m \'mous di ipline ' r latin~ to YOUt11.

In 110rts to dc\" lop the nter. as a "r er\'oir of knowl da " about ,"OUt1l, Un.i\'er. it\ fa ult\" m mber . tud nt in \ outh fieldS and om~ I11tUlit\' leader ' havc b en m tina for n 'arh- two \ ar. Tb dialo!!ue

", .... from th roup' c i n will be publi h d and \\idel)" ddributcd.

'The rc. p n from tho in th commlll1ih and ni\' r it\ \\'ho want to c'onh'ibutc ha~ bt ~ on' r­whelming," \ 1r:. . Konopka aid. "" 'e all f 1 t1l1.'re i . .1 iefinite need for in- ' rvic(' tr.linin lT for \'outh

b " 1 nder. working in tlll.' field t da: .

31

A PIECE OF MINNESOTA THAT FLEW TO THE MOON IS PRESENTED TO SPACE SCIENCE CENTER

32

UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Malcolm Moos, University Space Science Center Director Laurence J . Cohill , Jr ., former Vice Preside nt Hubert H. Humphrey and Assistant Space Science Center Director Trygve A. HolI , stand together to adm ire the Apollo 12 medallion after its presentation to the University. A CLOSE-UP OF THE MEDALLION can be seen at the left.

A half-dollar- iz d pi e of Minne-ota th at B w to th moon in the

hip po k t of stronaut Charles "P t " onrad, Jr., aboard the Apol­lo 12 Bight las t ov mb r has b en r turned to th Uni v rsit for p r­man nt display.

Bcfor the Apollo 12 lTIl SSlOn "Pet " onrad ask d form r Vie Pr id nt Hub rt Humphr y if th r wa anything h would lik to send to th moon. om'ad and Humphrey had b n friend Humphrey's work a the ational Spa

ALUMNI NEW

Chnrle omad, Jr. , on the Apollo 12 Moon Flight on ovember 1969 at th requ t of form r Vic Pr i-d nt Hub rt H . Humphr on be-half f th Spac Sci n nt r of the · niv rsit) f 1inn ota."

In an informal l' mon F bru-ary 17 at th enter, HumphI' y, curl' ntly an adjunct prof or at th Vniv l' i , pr nt d th m dallion to niv rsity Pre id nt lalcolm :\100 .

During th p1' ntation, Humph­r y noted that the pace ci nc C nt l' wa but on of the product of lh national pace program who su es ful moon landings h:1 e had a tremendous impact on oviet 1 ad-1.'1' a w II a on th re t of the world. Th enter was built through 2Jf million dollars in funds prOVided by th ational Spa and Aeronautic dmini tration ( A) and anoth l' Jf million provid d

by th tate. Humphr y call d m rica' fir t

moon landing "thc gr at t mo toward world peace that has hap­p 11 d thi centw '.

"v e \ er fi e )' ars behind tll oviet in our pace program,' he ai 1. "But \ mad a eommitm nt,

filled th O'ap and did \ hat \ e said \\. \ ould do (in pace) .

"' " prov d tha t wh n our go -cmm nt combine with our bu ines sector, tog ther \V can do any­thing,"

Humphr )' aid that h felt tll sue e of th moon landing would influen e the nu 1 a1' arm talk , sinc the O\'i ts would no\ b afraid that th \' would ome in s c­ond-b st in tl;e ad" nt of an arm fa e.

Cons qu ntl ', tll PI' sident not d, "tll u e mann d fligh t to th moon and the spac proj et that ha pIa d a ) -tem in out r spa e to monitor nu­clear tes ts, have made thc pn e proO'ram worth r dollar i\1\' t-

el in it. " nel thc niv l' itv benent el a

well," h aid. Humpiuey cit d the a clera tion of t hnology and the miniatur ization of omput r tllat l' suIte 1 fro m th spae program a

I R II 1970

direct benefits to education as well as the building of such educational faciliti s as th pace Science Cen-ter by SA.

"This m dallion mean that we parti ipat dl Thi is a gr at niver­sity that from the earl days has b en in the forefront of aeronautics and space r search."

In ace pting the medallion for th niv rsit\ , President ~roo thank d

Humphr~ for his "mu cular work" < a senator and vic president that has brought 0 much to ili niver-it\'.

:'\Vc \ ill cherish the medal," ~roos said.

" ,\!v h a e mad ilie predictions of Dr . Juliu and Jeannette Piccard com tlue. 0\ we are at a new state of xistenc . pollo 12 P d toward the moon, the Uruver itv b -gan cel b~~ting it lOOth ann'iver-ar\, . ..

-100 tl1<'n pr ented the medal­lion to Lawr nce ahill, dir ctor of th pace cienc Cent r.

Cahill aid that ili medallion will be plac d on permanent displa;' in th C nter alonO' with ili moon rocks. Th piece of Minne ota iliat went to the moon will be encased in a pIa tic block, and xhibited in a light d , r \'olving ca e.

NOMINATIONS FORMAA BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Accord ing to the By-laws of the Minnesota Alumn i Association, nominations to the MAA Board of Directors can be made upon the petition of not less than 25 members of the Minnesota Alumn i Associat ion. The pe tition should be fil ed, in writing, with the president of the Association not less than 90 days prior to th e Annual Meeting, wh ich th is yea r is scheduled for June 2. In order to meet the dead line, subm it your nominations immediate ly!

NEW GRAD SCHOOL PO LICY RECOMMENDS TRANSFER CREDITS

g n ral policy of ace ptinO' b.-an -f r cr dit for otller ~Iinnesota col­leg and univer!>itie to b applied toward master of arts and mast r of science degr e \ as recently adopted by the x cutive commit­tee of tb niv r it)' Graduate

chool. The deci ion of wh th r or not to

actuall), accept transfer cr dits and the numb r to be accept d will b determined by the director of grad­uate studie in each major fi Id.

Before the institution of this ne\ polic)" tran fer of credit has not b n pemlitted in the standard­lengtll ma ter of arts and master of sci n program , althouuh it has be n possibl in ilie profe -sional ma ter' programs iliat are of unwmal length, as well as ilie pecialist and doctor of education

and doctor of philo ophy de re programs.

<OIn a time ",h n po t-baccalau­reate education i incr < ingl;' inl­portant and individual., are incr as­ingly mobile, graduate offering in th everal in titution in our re­!!ion bould be coordinated and complement ,u-y," aid Bryce Craw­ford Jr. dean of the Graduate

chool. rawford ncouraO' d th direc­

tor of graduate tudi in evera! major fields to develop coop rati\' program with oilier tate in titu­tion . H also su ted tllat pro-O'1'am for indi\idual tudent whi h ~U'e appro\'ed in adVtUlce, ma\, involv ub tantial amolU1t of tudy taken at Otll r in titution ,

whii at tll am time r taininu . ufficicnt con nb'ation at tll ru­Y l' it)' t as ur that ili d gr -

nferring faculty i uillci ntl:· familial' with the tud nt. "'h n thc proQ'ram of indi\'idual tud nt ar not appro\' d in advanc .. the Graduatc hoI's ex utiv 0111-

mitte ha authoriz d faculn 0111-

mitte in tll major field . to n -, pt a ma .. \:imum of nine qu~uler er dit from other ho Is.

3"

AROUND &ABOUT

Institute of T echnology ___ _

'44 JTenry B. Tillotson '44B~lE, linn­

apolis, has b en appointed dire tor of faciliti s planning for Toro hnuEa tur­ing orporation's .. , Canadian and Europ an markets. IIe has b n associ­ated with Toro ince 1953 a a sistant dir ctor of manufacturing, manag r of con umer products, manufacturing and ngin ering, and dire tor of manufactur­

ing. Previou Iy, Tillotson \ as a produc­tion ngineer with Lincoln El ctri , and affiliated with the 3M Company, Data Products Corporation and th B mis Company.

John W. t. Vincellt '44B 1E, from a family with a long and proud tradition in the st I industry which he i carrying on, has been named division up rinten­d nt of th axon burg plant of nited State teel's Homestead " ork . Pr vi­ously t. Vincent was as istant divi ion sup rintendent of blast furnac s at IIome tead. He held a similar po t be­for coming to HOIn stead in 1966 from U .. St el's South \Norks in hicago. A nativ of Hibbing, linn sota, t. Vin nt spent two ycar as an iron or sampler with the Oliver Iron Mining Company before ent ring college in 1940.

'48 Marlin P. e/.son '48BC <, warth1110r,

Pennsylvania, ha been named manager of advanced manag ment and m thods d velopm nt to the manufacturing and ngineering divi ion staff of un Oil

Company's new Products roup . elson, who ha been with un since 1948 when h joined R s arch and D velopment's t hnical servi group aL Marcus Hook, P nnsylvania, b came a sistant proc ss ngine r in 1953 at the Philadelph ia n­

gin ring division and in 195 joined the ad an ed management and m thods di­

ision . A y ar lat r h was named s nior 1 mical ngineer, lh n assistant dire -

tor until b coming manag r in 1963.

'50 Dr. Floycl L. Ramp '50PhD h ,

Br ·ksvill , Ohio, senior r sear h as 0-

34

Ti llOTSO N

iate at th B. F. Coodri h (BFC) re­search c nter, ha b n named re earch fellow, th highe t s ientific titl given in th ompany and on r served for research r \ ith ex eptional records of a hi ment. Dr. Ramp, who holds s v n patents for tlle alteration and improve­ment of rubbers and plastic and is co­inventor of C on 600, joined BFC a re earch chemist aft r scning a research fellow hip at las achus tts Institut of Technology (~lIT). v hile at ~I1T h aS ' bted th late Profes or Ithur ope, internationally-known chem! al r search-

r, and earli r work by Hamp at linne­ota led to th synth sis of man ' new

mat rials.

• • MORE NEW • • • • SERVICES • • • • from 4th NW • • • • *

INSTANT INTEREST • • Ea rn full interest each day • on savings depos its; with-• draw any time. • • * FREE CHECKING • • No c ha rge fo r c hecks wri tte n

• on accounts wi th $100 mini-

• mu m ba la nce.

• • • Fourth • • Northwestern • • National Bank • • • Cedar and Riverside

• • DRIVE-IN SERVICE • • FREE PARKING

• Me mbe r F.D.I.C . PHON E 339-8741 • • •

ST. VINCENT NELSON

'56 William . lJand '56B:-'lE, El,men', w York, who join d Huyck Felt 0111-

pan)" R nss la r, ew York, in 1966 a manag r of marketing services and \\,\\ named sal s managcr in 1967, Tee nth bc ame dir tor of mark ling for thaI company. Prior to joining I III) c:k he \\01'

II product manager with . r r. D· t ' r produ rs of sp ciality indlLstrial papers and an indw.trial ,al sman \\Ith thl Aluminum mpan of meriC:l.

'60 Dr. Rog r A Lot:ald '60B hCII! ha,

h n ntlm·d tl group I ader for n·.,ill dc\ lopment hy eneral }'Iilb" ~Iinneap ­olis. II came to n ral ~ I il]" frolll Rohrn & IIaas omp, ny, Philadelphia . \ here h w, s a s nior res arch clll'l1li't

Agriculture ______ __ _

'44 R.

'62 Joseph D. [tllIen '62B g, linne­

apoli, has b en made head of arboh,­drate dev lopl11ent for neral ~lills. national producer of COlhlll11er food, .

'64

L 1 I EW

thropology, zoology and other of th Cni\' r ity of l is oud, olumbia. Pr s­entI) he is an assc,tant professor.

Business __________ _

'39 Donald W. Gates '39BB, kron,

Ohio, previously general manager of -sociated Lin s alc for the B.F. Good­rich Company (BFG) IDC 1965, has b en named vice president, ociated Lin ale . Gat join d BFG in 1939. After s rving in lhe .. Fi ld rtillery in tllC outh Pacilic during W'" II, Gates j in d tll ad\' rti ing and sal s promo­tion department of As oCiated Lin s in 1946 and progressed through the man­ag m nt ranks.

'42 KCIlllcth L. Block '42BB . Chicago,

Dlinois, president of . T. Kearn y & ompan' and a ch ic Icader, has been

elect d til sev nteenlh pr ident of the hicago rime ommis ion, a SO-y ar­

old nonpartisan citizens' "watchdog" or­ganization. member of tlle ommission sin 1962, Block has ned on it board of director since 1964, has held the of­fic ~ of vic president and treaSl1I" r, and in ovember chair d th om mission' annual "Chicago La\\ Enforcement \Veek." In addition, h cun- ntl \' sen' on the board of dir tor of the' hi a 0

chapt r of the Boy nts of America, the Red ross, the Y I of letropoli-tan hicago, and is \ ic chainnan of tlle Budg t ommittee of the omIlHmit\' Fund of hi ago. r gistered profe'­ional engin er and a certifi~d public ac-

countant, Bloc!.. join d . T. K me)' in 19.1 ,

Education ________ _

'55 Donald Moria l1 y 'SSB , D n\'er, 0 10-

rado, has joined th olomdo d partment of du ation as coordinator of the 1 -gional enter for ervi es to Deaf-Blind

hildrcn in the dep.lItmcnt's dh ision f pe 'ial dll alion st'r\ i 'So Ile coordinates

diagnostic, ducll lional and rdat d s 1'\' -

1 R H 1970

HAND

ice for deaf-blind children for a Lx-state region. ~I oriart)' has been director of so­cial and child care ervice at the Indiana

chool of the Blind, Indianapolis, and at IIIinoi Braille chool, Chicago. He aI 0

T\ d as a caseworker in Chica~o for the Fanlily rvice Bur au and Children's Ho pital- chool.

CLA------------------'56

James K. Morris 'S6BA, Caracas, Vene­zuela, pre ident and director general of

nion Carbid ' nezu la operation, is retiring after 13 years n;ce with Car­bide, nine of tllem in over eas work. He is joining the American Can Company in V nezuela as pr ident and chief execu­tive officer of Em'ase Venezolano tlle largest over eas inve tment of AmCan 0,

Dr. Bartolo J. pano 'S6BA.. Da)ton, Ohio, was elected pre ident of the ~1iami Valley P ycholo17ical ociation at tlleir recen't annual meeting. clinical p y­chologi t, Dr. pano becanl head of Wright tate nh'er ity' counseling cen­ter in eptember. Th campus, in it Lnh year, has a rue\'ed uni\ersit tatus and sen e ,700 students from the Dayton area.

Graduare -----------------

'37

RAM P HENDRICKSO N

group compo ed of adult participants in Girl couting. and has held \'arious posts in that organization.

'51 Lynn H. Draper 'SIMA, a ociate gen­

eral ecretarv of the Kentucky . 0 ia­tion of Chri ' tian Churche ,ha resigned his po ition "'ith KACC to become vice president for tudent aHair at Tran yl­vania Diver ity. Thi is a new po t, established under a basic admini trati\ e reorganization due to Tran ylvania' re­cent growth and e.-"'Pansion program. A -ociated with KACC for the past eight

year, Draper was minister of adrnini tra­tion at entral Chri tian Church in Lexington from 1956-01.

'53 Dr. Lee ,\1. Day 'S3PhD. profes or of

agricultural economic ,ha been named head of tlle Department of gricultural Economic and Rural ociology at the Pennsylvania tate ni\'er it\'. Before joining the Penn tate faculty: Dr. Da\' en'ed on tlle taH of the U .. Depart­

ment of griculture from 1961 to 1967, the la t two year heading an anal) tic group in tb Planning. Evaluation and ProQTammin)!; tuff in tll office of tlle

cr tnry of Agriculture. lIe has aI 0

en'ed on the facultie of the Fni\'ersities of \\'Lsconsin and ~Iinne ota.

'56 Dr. Raine Hunt Thorup '56~ I 6 PhD

h, b en promoted from a .oeiate profe -or to prof or of Horne Economic at alifornia tnte, Lo n ele . he i,

acting chainuan of the Department of E onorni there. Prior to joining tlle

al tate hculn in H)6-!, he wa su­pen 'i or of hom malin education for the Long Bea h Unified ho I Di tri t, An authorit\' in the area of nutrition for low income' familie • Dr. Thorup is cur­rently inyol\' d in preparing 10-30 min­ute program on nutrition. including preparation and .hopping hinb for good purch, er.

'57

Dr. Robert C. Hildrcth '-7PhD ha. b com , istant sale managl'r for agri­cul tural and anitan' chl'mical in the

"5

Export deparhllent of Rohm and IIaas Com pan . Pr viously he wa enior t ch­nical sal s rep re entati e in the Cnli­forn ia d i trict.

'58 Dr. 1I. te e Yanai '58PhD, Moor s­

to\\m, ew JeT ey, has been appointed laboratory head in th I' s arch divi ion at Rohm and Haas Company' Bristol, Pennsylvania, location. He joined Rohm and Haa in 1958, and since that timp has been engaged in analytical research work. A native of Tokyo, Dr. Yanai b -cam a naturalized citiz n in 1963.

'60 Charles E. Redman '60PhD, Indian­

apoUs, Indiana, has b en promot d to assistant director of scientific information ervice by Eli Lilly and Company. For­

merly he was head of research statistics and records. R dman joined the pharma­ceutical firm in 1960 as a senior biom tri­cian in statistical research; in 1962 he \ as promoted to deparhllent head of agricultural statistics and two years later became assistant head of tatistical re­search.

'61 Dr. Robert C. Peter en '61PhD, Chevy

Chase, Maryland, has been nanled chief

is the answer a different school?

Knowing the differences in schools and in ch ildren has been our spec ial concern for more than 25 years. Ask us to send you our f ree booklet "To

F;~h~;~;

f!QJ 36

Bunting and Lyon, Inc. Telephone (203) 269-3333 Wallingford, Connecticut 06492

The importance of a W ILL A \vill i a ba 'ic instrument of any estat planning. \ ithout a "'rill, the in.­

dividualloses all control 0 r the distribulion of his estat. 1a)' w re p ctfully sugg t that you k p in mind that your \ ill is a us ful and fitting vehicle for benefiting your Alma ,fat 1'. 111 d sir to create ami to be r m mb r d a ben factor to post rity is a natural and admirable human a pi ration.

A b que t to the niy r ity of 1inne ota Alumni Fund provides an unusual opportunity for invc ting in the future of thi reat in tituti n and in the p opl whom it s n ' . Th re ar counties oppoltuniti for memorial bequests. For example, tile idea of investing a gift in tile hlmni Freshman holar hip Pro­gram or research uggests living divid nds that reach out to an ntire people. For all uch gift, bolli llie p rman nc and the integrity of the niversity stand as guarant e of car ful planning and ~visdom in their xpenditures.

In addition to b qu st , there ar many oth r important ways in which you can promote xcell nee at the niver ity of linne ota. The include gifts of ca h, gift of prop rt , gifts of securities, bargain sales or donative sales, life in uranc agre ments, gifts of current in ome, and gifts of insurance.

Please fill out til attached form and we will be happy to end you our bequest folder.

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ALUM NI FUND 205 Coffman Memorial Union, Un iversi ty of Min nesota Minn eapo lis, Minnesota 55455

Please se nd detail ed informa tio n on how to ma ke a gift or bequ est to the Un iversi ty of Min nesota ALUMNI FU ND.

Nam~e ______________________________________________________ _

AddresL' ____________________________________________________ _

City _____________________________ State _____________ Zipf>-____ _

Closs and Call e9~e ______________________________ _

of the Center for tudi s of arcotic and Drug Abu e of th alional Institut of

lental HaIth. Acting chief of the en­ter sinc 1968, Pet rs n join d Ule a­tiona! lnstitut of Mental Health in 1965. PreyiollSly, after ervic as a clinical psy­cho!ogil>t at tile eteran Administration lIospital, 1inneapoUs, and an instructor at the ni r ity, he be am a sistant research prof s or in lhe d partl11ent of psychology at eorg 'vV, ~hington ni­v rsity, 'vVashington, D. ., in 1962. y ar tat r h b came asso iat profes or at llie Psychological ent r for th D af at alIaudet ollege, Iso in , ashington, D.C. The author of num rous prof ssi 11-

al paper, P tel's n's most recent have d alt ~vith drug abuse.

'62 Dr. Philip F. Dickson, '62PhD, olden,

01 rado, has b n promoted to profes­sor of ch mical and p trol um reRning engin ering at the 01 r, do chool of Mines. native of II uron, outh Dakota, he jOined the Min s staff in 1963.

'64 Philip J. Peumall '64MA has b en

nam d an assistant proFessor of psy­chology at 1acMurray 011 'g , Ja kson-

vill , JII inois. do toral candid'lt> ,t th niyer~ity, Pettman s n 'ed as a t aching

a sistant in U. p 'chology departnwnt while in gr, duate chool and lat r be­cam an instru tor. II \ as a res arch assil>tant and minorit employment co­ordinator for th 1inneapolis as Com­rany prior to his urrent appointm nt.

'65 Franklin W. Brie e '59B '63 1

'65PhD, formerly interim as i tant di­re tor of th Biom dical Data Proce ing

nit and an a i tant prof or in the Biomclry Di i ion of Ul 1inne ot,)

chool of Public Health, ha b en ap­point cl a si tant prof s or of biostati tics in the Divi ion of Biometric of tlll'

niversity of olorado chool of Medi­cin .

'65 Dr. LOll is J. rimlll '65PhD has joined

lhe facu lty of th nh rit of Ii ouri, 'Roll a ( ~m), as an aso iate professor of math matics. rr ame to fR fr III

th ni\ ersit of tah \ her h was an assbtant professor of mathematics. Dr

rillllll hol d~ his master's d gr e fr0111 th> ,{,ll1'gia Im titut of Technolog and his baehel r\ frOI11 t. Louis lli \ rsit,.

EW

D EATHS

'44 Harley Burgett '+lBEE, of Mayhill 1 'e\ ~ I e)(ico, wa~ kill d in an automobile accident in Ore Grande, e\ Mexico,

eptember 1, 196 .

'21 Dr. Ray E. Dock~tadter '21DD , died Februa!) 3 at age 71. A d ntist in xnard, California, for 42 years, Dr. Docbtadter was a lifetim member of the Oxnard Elk Lodge and the outhern California Dental sociation. He r tired from dental practice in 1967.

'05 Dr. Franci~ C. Frary '05B hem '06M '12PhD, Out tanding chievem nt Award rccipient, died FebruaT) 4 at age 5

in Oakmont. Penn­ylvania. In 1903

Dr. Frar)' \\ as on the Uni\'er it~' g)mnas­tic team. and ru a faculh member he h Iped to de ign the chemistry building and wrote a book on glas blowing. Dr. Frar) de\' lop d 6\ I' kinds of lead allo\ s, one f \\'hich \;a

nanled for him and al 0 found the cret of producing phosgene gas in commercial quantities during \ orld War I , For 34 ) ' ar!> he work d for th uminum Com­pan) of merica < h ad of th ir research d partment. lIe was pa t president of the EI troch mical 0 i ty and the Ameri­can Imtitut of hem rca! Engineer, b -ides bing til re ipient of Ache on

Medal, th El troch mica! 0 i ty's high ~t a\\. rd, and the Legion of lIonor <1\\ < rd of the meri an Institute of lin­ing, It r his 19- 2 retirement, Dr. FraT) be ame a translator of s ientilic article. for the Aluminum ompany of Am rica and returned to colleg to ludy Russian. III' liv d in Oakmont at the time of hi death.

'22 . E. Fribl y '22B died in etober. lIe lived in J or\\ich, New York, and \\ as a life m mber of the l innesota Alumni sso iation .

'22 lathi lda Hokanson '22M died Jan­liar) 21 at ag 84 in arBeld, [inn sot . , he taught in 1\1inneapolis, Roche ter and (,ther towns b fore mo\ ing to a faml near rH Id in 1 39.

:t-- l R H 1970

habilitation program. In 1936 he re­turned to farming near Jeffers.

'46 John Perushek '46BA died se\'eral ) ears ago. Il e H"ed in Eveleth, ~[jnne­sota.

'21 Judae llenry N. Grocen '21LLD died February 1 in an Antonio, Texas, at age 76, d~ring surgeT)'. Judge Graven had retired from the f deral bench but \\as pre iding in an ntonio on pecial assignment at the time of his death. lie was credited with founding the pen­,ion plan of th old American Lutheran

hurch and was a member of the Board of ppeals and djudication of The American Luth ran Church, ~\ hich was founded in 1960. In 1944, after erving as ,m Io\\'a district judge since 1937,

A gift of $500.00 was recent­ly given to the Medical Mien> scope Fund in memory of Clif­ford D. Molzahn '52 MD, Red­lands, California, who died sud­denly September 29. He was 49.

A St. Paul native, Dr. Molzahn, as a member of the Minnesota National Guard 109th Aero Squadron, was induded into the Army and graduated from the Army Air Corps Flight School at Kelly Field where he was com­missioned in 1940. Flying fighter escort, he logged more than 50 aerial missions in the European and African theaters of war, and was the winner of the Air Medal, several Oak leaf Clusters and the Distinguished Flying Cross.

Dr. Molzahn was dischaTged as a lieutenant colonel in 1946, and served with the Air Force Reserve for several years.

He had been a junior in aero­nautical engineering at the Uni­versity before the war, but re­turned to the campus to take pre­medical courses and enter medi­cal school. Following the comple­tion of his internship at Orange County Hospital , Santa Ana, Cali­fomio , he returned again to Minnesota for his residency and fellowship training in ophthal­mology.

Dr. Molzahn was a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa medical fraternity, and a fellow of the Amel ican Academy of Ophthal­mology and Otolaryngology and the American Medical Associa­tion .

Judge Graven was nanled to the federal bench for the northern Iowa district.

' 31 Comelis B. Kaercher '3IB Ed died October 14. he was a retired librarian and instructor in Libra!) cience at the

t Paul Academv. Mis Kaercher had pr~viol1Sly b en librarian of tJle Carnegie Library in Mel bank, outh Dakota. Dur­ing that tinle she was pre ident of the American Library ociation and the

cbool LibrarianS.

'16 Wanda L . Da'im '16B HE died December 22. be lived in " 'aterloo, Iowa.

'21 Ross L. Huntsinaer '21B died Janu­arY 1 at age 70 of leukemia. ~[r. Hunt­iIiger retired in 1964 after 30 year in ~Iinneota agricultural extension work, 20 of which were spent in Xoble Coun­ty. t tJle time of his death he lh'ed in Grants Pas, Oregon.

'40 ~frs . Virginia K. XOTman '40B Ed, t. Paul, died August 1 , 1969, at age

50. The public relations director for Twin Citie . WLOL radio held veral offices in the state and Ram ey County Republi­can owanizations. She \\'a a captain in the Women' Arml Corp during "·WI1.

'46 Robert E. O'ConncZl '46B Ed, t. Paul corporations counsel and in the city' legal office for 20 years, died December 26, 1969, at age 51. The t. Paul mayor eulogized him a "one of tJle linest public officials in our memory." who had made iglli£cant contribution not onl~ to the

cit\' but to Ram e\' county and the }.[in­ne ' ota legislature' as \~· ell. O'Connell joined th city as an as i tant corpora­tions counsel in 1949 and during his career handled mam of the ticldest legal problem faCing t. Paul.

' 51 Lyle O. Esten 011 '51PhD, Korth ­lield, ~Iinnesota, noted profe or of p y­choloer" and education at Carleton Colleae, died uddenh TOY mber 29, 1969, at age 53. He carne to Carleton in 1952 from the po-ition of i tant pro­fes 'or of edu ation at Purdu Uni\·ersih'. From 1953 until 1967 he ,erved < cO­chainnan of the p ycholo!!) and educa­tion departm nt, and ince 1957 has held the rank of full profe or, longtim leader in ~[inne ota seconda" edu ation tJle onetim hiah , chool te,{cher en'ed from 1963-65 a a member of tbe om­mitte on c reditation for the tate Department of Education. In 1962 he pent evera! month in tea her educa­

tion research in Hawaii and in that time had written man\' article ' on arle­ton' contribution -and methods of teacher ducation.

'55 R. . n low 'S-B , 1\[inneapoli , wa killed in action in iebl. III at Quang Tai on fa 10, 196 III' was awarded tJle Bronz . tar.

37

POLLUTION CONTROL CENTER ...

to breathe the air, and they will have to do something about it."

The environment-oriented movement is a political movement, Griffin said , and those in it are trying to change national priorities. New political candidates will be forthcoming who will change the way the national government spends its money if the movement is successful , he said . These candidates won 't let over 50 percent of the national budget go for defense ; they will keep the nation from killing itself, Griffin said.

" We're really a radical movement and nobody knows about it yet ," he continued . Those in the new movement are interested not only in pollution , he said , but in changing the American way of life - to make the American lifestyle nonconsumptive, therefore less pollutive.

Griffin said that his first priority is working to end the war and that most of the students he works with on the Teach-In committee feel the same way. But Griffin is pessimistic about today 's chances of ending the war.

He thinks that the current administration is trying to divert student activism to environmental problems - mainly pollution. However, he has found that most of those students actively involved in the new environmental issues realize this and really feel that the war issue still has first priority.

The nationwide April 22 Teach-In was initiated by Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson and California Representative Paul McCloskey. The University's Environmental Teach-In committee will sponsor a week 's worth of activities centered around "Earth Day," the Wednesday on which the Teach-In is to be held.

ALUMNAE SCHOLARSHIP TEA

The tentative schedule includes, early in the week, an outdoor display of models of buildings for " living in harmony" with the environment. The models are to include such futuristic plans as geodesic domes in which man will live.

On Wednesday, April 22, from 10:00-12 :00 a.m., a rally featuring the reading of an " environ­mental declaration of interdependence and bill of rights" will take place on the Minneapolis campus . During the afternoon a teach-in, that is expected to include 20 minute speak-outs by a variety of personalities from the Twin Cities ' area and around the country, will be held. In the evening, a workshop session, open to the public , will forge specific action proposals on sUbstantative issues concerning the environment. These are the proposals that will be delivered to legislators. The workshop will be held throughout the Teach-In week, during the after­noon and evening.

On Thursday, April 23, at 7:00 p.m., Paul Ehrlich will deliver the keynote address. He is author of The Population Bomb, a controversi al book about possible political and ecological catastrophes that could happen as a result of overpopUlation. More workshops will be held later in the evening.

Robert Sinsheimer of the California Institute of Technology will speak on genetic engineering on Friday, April 24.

A day of interaction between local high school students and the University is scheduled for Saturday in order to form a collective statement from high school-age students who are con­cerned about their environment. Teach-In planners hope to interest attending high schoolers in an ongoing movement and involvement. A rock festival will punctuate the evening.

PI" sid nt Jam Watson, Dr. L n­ard rling, past pr sid nt of th M rucal lumni Association; Clar-

Iumnae Iu b : L. J ann tt

nc Bro , past MAA board m m­ber; Otto Qual , past MAA bard m mb r ; Gorge P nno k, M A board m mb r; Al wanson, pr i­d nt of the General 011 g Alum­ni; Waldo Hard II and J ff Wright.

!Tang ments for th annual af­fair th at ha b n providing four full-tuition cholar hips for Uni r­sity fr shman wom n w r mad b the offic rand elir tors of thc

3

Wigg , pr id nt; Nlargar t 1. Mull, fir t vic pI" id nt; Eth I n Johnson Bro , ond vic pr si­d nt; rlin Dimond, r tary; Judith Fro t Flinn, tr a ur r; Ir n Kr idb rg, histori an; and li L. Brunat, Rub . Mo " Diana Kusk

furph , Patricia Fadd n Part-ridg , Eil n T igum Russ 11, Eliz­ab th chli k, Margar t Hag n

maby, Kath rim: Th<l) r Thomp­son and irgini a B chtol, p, t pr -id nt.

Have You Seen The

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Schedule A Showing!

L I I Ev

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HERE'S AN EXAMPLE! you're a member of MAA under age 65 and you subscribe to the $30-a-day plan ($900'a-month plan), and you're hos­pitalized for 10 days, you get ... $300 . ($30 a day times 10 days) .

• It's NON-CANCELABLE, so coverage can be continued even for lifetime! Benefits are modified at age 65.

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INTERESTED? Mail this coupon, and we'll mail you all the details.

a :·CNA/insurance service >O\A , UW\W

MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Insurance Administrator, 2649 Park Avenue, Minneapolis , Minnesota 55407

I WANT TO KNOW MORE about my Minnesota Alumni Association HOSPITAL MONEY PLAN. I understand I am under no obligation, and no salesman will call.

NAMt..E _______________ YEAR GRADUATED FROM UNIVERSITY _________ MAA : ____ _

ADDRES;,.S ______________ CITY __________ STATt..E ________ ZIP _____ _

REGENT'S ROOM

and your nome belongs on this cardl

SEND TO:

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ALUMNI CLUB 205 Coffman Union University of Minn. Minneapolis 55455

You belong in this

Picture-

at the

ALUMNI CLU The University of Minnesota Alumni Club is an exclusive private

club for graduates and former students of the University of

Minnesota. It is the only club of its kind in the Twin City area

open to both men and women. It is the only such facility exist­

ing among the Big 10 schools. Your membership card in this

club is truly a mark of distinction .

Located in the Sheraton-Ritz hotel overlooking the fabulous

Nicollet Mall in downtown Minneapolis, the Club provides many

services to its members . It is superbly convenient for dining,

lunches, meetings or banquets - or for just getting together

with friends.

Call the Alumni Office for more information (Area 612

Phone 373-2466). If you are presently a member, use the

application form below to ask a fellow alumni to start using

the Club, tool

ALUMNI CLUB MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION hereby apply for a Resident membership (7-county metro area $42 .00

dues, $20 .00 initiation fee) ; or a Non-resident membership

($ 10.00 dues, $10 .00 initiation fee) _____ in the University of Minne·

sota Alumni Club .

My check is enclosed for $ ____ _ I am now a member of the Minne·

sota Alumni Association in good standing . Yes __ No __ (If you are

not a member, send $10.00 additional for annual MAA membership dues .)

Name __________________________ __

Home Address. ____________________________ _

City ________________ State ______ Zip ______ _

__ Please send spouse card MAA Serial Number _ _____ _

cflir Special yourself to Europe on TIA and ~ave up to 50 percent! You actually can save up to 50 percent on a tour of Europe because you travel Air Special on TIA group charter rates

Two hundred and fifty members of a New York City organization toured London , Paris and Rome for three weeks for

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This low prorated price covered air and ground transportation , hotel accommodations and

sightseeing . You can enjoy equally big savings to any destination . Leave from any-

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But keep in mind, a group tour can be as personal and pri vate an adventure

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Cily' ______________ State ___ Zip ___ Phone' ____ _

Name of my organization ______________ _

Also, it might just help to contact the organizallon officer Indicated below :

(Approx no of people In local organlzal,on)

Officer's name ____________ ~Address __________ _

Destination Departure Date ________ _

ALUMNI C.LUB NOTES

Associate "AI embers of the Alumni Club for a five year period after date of graduation. Club dues for an ociat {ember are just $10.00 a year, the regular $20.00 initiation fee being waived.

Th only other requirem nt is that the applicant must b come a memb r of the • finn ota Alumni

sociation ( MAA ), ( if not already a member). Graduate are automatically MAA members for the fir t year after graduation.

Th ociate Memb r enjoys all privile of

NEW CLUB MANAGER APPOINTED the lub xcept voting rights. ew ~raduates need th fellowship and contact offered by the Alumni Club as much as anyone.

Bob appointed manager of th Help us to bring more of these younger graduates into th Club. Tell the on you know about lumni lub. Born and

rais dint. Paul, Bob att nd d t. Thomas oll ge and th ni r ity of

linn sota. Aft r graduating from G n ral olleg h 1110 d to alifomia wh r he continu d hi education and g. in d valuabl work experienc . ' Yh n talking to Bob ou r alize that he bring youthful Yigor and a keen en e of direction to

lumni lub position.

u Associate Iembership" - or perhap give one as a gift.

SPECIAL NEW MEMBER OfFER

THE CL B I ITIATIO FEE of 820.00 for new member is being waived entirely during the current membership campaign - effecti e throuah December. Right now an applicant for m mber hip who live within the even-county Twin Citi m tropolitan area can join by paying only the regular Re ident ~Iemb r hip due of '42. a year (83.50 a month ).

nub ha b '(,11 pI a ed to e 0 man group , uch a th aval Re rv Judg dvocat nit. and th

Alumni living outside th Twin Citi area may apply for I on-re ident },Iember hip at just 10.00 per . ·ear.

Engin rs lub. u ing th lumni lub' excellent facilitic on a r gular basi .

Th only r quirement for m mber hip in th lun1ni Club i that th applicant must b a

memb r of th ~finne ota . lumni " ociation ( 10.00 annual due ).

When ) ou ar planning a r gular me ting or a privat part) at th lub call Bob Heill at 336-3031,

If vou'r alr ad\, a m mb r of the Alumni lub, now'i the time to introduce a fellow alumnus

and h \ ill make ur everything i prepar d to \ ur order.

ASSOCIATE MEMBERSHIP fOR RECENT GRADS

amOI1O' your fri nd or co-work r to th Club and it facillti . rO' th m to irn up during the

PECIAL OFFER PERIOD. e th application II niver ity of Minn ota graduate "ith form b lo\\'.

baccalaur ate deO'r are eliaibl to becom Or, GIVE MEJIBER HIP FOR GRAD TIO

------------------- --- ------------ ----------------- ----

Send To:

UNIVERSITY OF

MINNESOTA ALUMNI CLUB

205 Coffman Union University of Minnesota

Minneapolis 55455

SAVE $20.00 -JOIN NOW!

\ PH. LL, 1970

ALUMNI CLUB MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION

Yes, I want to take advantage of the speCial offer. Please enroll me as a mem­ber of the Alumni Club. Resident membership, $42.00 ; Non-resi-de nt, $10.00. __ _

I am a member of the Minnesota Alumn i Association in good sta nd ing (Yes _ No _). My check is e nclosed in the amou nt of $ (If you are not 0 member, include $10.00 addit ional for annual MAA member. ship dues.) MAA Se riol Num b er Ex p irot ion Dote ___ _

Cl o ss o nd College _______ _

No me ____ _________________________ _

Home Address ___________________________ . _____ _

City __________ Sto te· _____________ Zip __ _

Pl eo se se nd sp ouse cord

3

WE RECENTLY HEARD FROM . . . Patrick Bradley, Director Solid Waste Division , American Hoist & Derrick Company, St. Paul, Minnesota

ABOUT THE MARCH ISSUE

" Your March 1970 issu of the Alumni w was fascinating to on whose

som etime titl is Dir c tor of Swine ub­stitut s or hief eagull urveyor .

"H ere in t . Paul, w hay a 1 s exotic approach to the probl m which is b e t xplain d in the olio of letters, sp eches, clippings and catalogs a COI11 -

panying this I tt r . If univ rSity tud nts w ish to put pres ure on m anufacturers, why not 1 t them be resolved to not buy any non-returnable bottl s or cans. The beer and soft drink producers would soon listen . What a public r lations cam­paign it could be, and ince I haven' t g iven this out before, it's yours.

" Incid entally, th fe llow who p ear­had ed the Metropolitan Twin City at­tack on solid wast is John E . Carroll who, incidentally, is p resid nt of Ameri­can Hoist & D errick, and i U of M class of 33 B C h m and on the ex cutive COI11-

mittee of tll e Alumni A ocia tion."

EDITOR'S NOTE: Arrangements are be­ing made to prepare an article on John E. Carroll and his company's work in solid waste disposal that will ap­pear in the Alumni News before the end of this publication year.

A. C. M. Ahlen '32BA '33MA '42PhD Minneapolis, Minnesota

ABOUT BEAVER 55

. ni ersity ad-min istra tion will tak som ignificant ac­tion agai nst th p rp trator of . wh at P r sid nt Moos rightly call m1l1dl ss vandalism.

"The institution seems to h ay been ov r lenient w ith the new I ft . To hay p erm itt d those caDing th msclves Be, v­e rs 55 to m et on ni r ily proper ty was a s rious rror. These p er ons were la uding acts of lawl ss d slructi n , some­thing we c, nnot cond on regard.! ss of whal we may th ink a bout lh draft.

"The issue of fT sp ch and ass mbly d o s not enter in . Th r is no const itu­tion al g uaranl e tha t th niver ity should host any and all g roups, some of w hich may I inimical to what thc in­stitulion stands fo r. If th es s1Ibv rsives d sire to pll t on a how, lel them hir their own qu, fte r ."

EDITOR'S NOTE: In the 1970 March is­sue of the Alumni News, on page 5, we pri nted earlier comments on the

4

~(JU!t

MINNESOTA CHAIR

Put a well-made Captain's chair in almost any surroundings, and its at home. urround it with Modern, Early

merican or Accumulated Comfy. It

II the best things about a aptain' chair are in this one: clean line , e­lected orthern hardwoods, e pert craftsmanship, burnished black finish gently trimmed in gold.

Price to member is just $37.00; non­member , 40.50. hipped to you ex­pres collect from Gamer, M . (Add 3 % tate Sale Tax TO TOTAL, Min­nota resident only.)

Minn esoto Alum ni Associotion

205 Coffman Un io n

Un iversi ty of Minneso ta

Mi nneapolis, Min nesota 55455

Enclose~ pleose fi nd my check for $

Kindly ship Minnesota ChairCs)

Name

Address

City Stat e Zip ..

University'S image received from Mr Ahlen - and erred in the product ion of his comments. We agree with Mr Ahlen , when he called the errors to our attention, that " lest some knowl­edgeable young idealist suppose that the old grad is ill informed, is seeking to coin new words or is beginning to get senile," we should print a correc tion . The words should be " coprophil . acs" not " caprophiliacs", and " apothe­osis" not "apothesis".

Mel Hansen '40BA, State Senator from the 34th District Minneapolis, Minnesota

ABOUT OUR POLLUTION COVERAGE

"Congratulatioll5 on w hat I feci r p­T S nl d your b t edition of the Illmni

ews yet . Th key topic of p ollu tion is on that offer the opportunit~ fOT foIlO\\­up a rticl s in addition to the p rovo ali\ tOTi s in th MaTch ed ition.

"Hop efully the thought timulator titl d "T wo-Wing d anitizer for a Pol­lut d World' will b T printcd in OU,PT

media of broader di , tribution. The l1 niqll bl nd of th reali \. dr am r with th do r thal w e brought logelh r 10

on man, org Rauenho r~ t , p oints the way to a solution of p robl ms that thr t n our urvival ."

EDITOR'S NOTE: Follow up articles on pollution will appear in 1970.

Paul W. Rhame '20BlndE Lake Worth, Florida

ABOUT THE FIRST OLD MAIN

'·Th" F ,brunI' lumni 'ws slin ed an old memoryl II wa~ ' par\..ed b~ till' p iclure of T he F il'sl Id t. l ai n.

.. n cple lnh 'r 2-1 , 190-1 , . ' a \..id of 9-\ l', I's-olcl , I hra rd the h OT\ '-d ra", ' nil " n'!-( in '~ l a ng in ~ onto th e campus. Look­ing ou l I sa\\' smoh· bi llowin ~ lip a, f ('\\ blocb nOllh 'n, [ of our hO l1 ~[, at 201 t al!

lr ' t.

L

"r da,li('d Ollt the door, following the tumult toward 'The Main'. FL et f t got m th re in about four minutes. At fir~t it w mostly smoke, th n Hames \)lIrst out of th windows and shot ky­ward with m -lling h atl

"Th 'n ~ teaJ11-driven fire engines snort d and pllmped franli ally. Yet th Brl' hos ~ that \\ re all over tiP plac:e w'P in ffec­tive. vera! hours later only smoldering walls remain d .

" ter cooung, w haunted the acid­smelling ruins for 'rare treasm s' but fOlllld only ~hes."

J ohn Holbe ck ' 2 4 BEE

West Linn, O reg o n

ABOUT FOOTBALL ATTENDAN CE

"Every issue of the Alumni N ws SeeT1l'> to stres the fact that attendance at football game keep droppinu a h yea r. Wh),? The Vikings and 1 rofessional fo tball are drawing the crowd. This is d p) rabl .

"I do not have one iota of ir.tere t in merc:enary profes iOllal footbaU . It is , game that hould b played for fun . I would b happy to see profe sional foot­hall aboli .. hed .

" \\ 11i1e at Minn .ota I did not mi. a sin Ie hom e game ... "

CREATIVE PROGRAMS

" PERSONALIZE"

UNIVERSITY CLASSES

\\'ithin an in titution oft n accu d of imper onnlit) b call of iz and crowd >d ·ondition , tud nts can ·till find oppOltunities for rea­ti it) , impro ed qunlit) du ation and per onalizcd in tru ti n. Two su h opp ltllUiti s - out of 1 or more ncw idea tri d rcc ntly at the niv rsit - ar a 1· utal cour-e that n itiz s dental tu­dent to th attitud and life t)'1 of p pIe, • nel a prO OTall1 that brin ~s commllni t ' p opl into th cIa ro mat a hr.

II freshman d ntal tudcnt n \ take a c:our e in II alth Behavior, initially off r 1 la t spring, that h Ip ' th III uncl 'r tand peopl and th 'ir d ntal habit - wh\ som !YO

to the 1 nti t an I other ' don't, for in tance.

'"Thi un] ' rstan ling is imp rtant if We' want t provid the be t in c1!'ntal car ~ for C\ ' 'ryon ,," a eorc1-

PHIL, 1970

ing to Dr. Joanna amuels and Mrs. J an \ oodbury, the creator of the class and both assi tant profe sors of h alth ecology.

Th cour e, by means of pan Is, vid o-tap dint rvie\ s with chil­dr 11 and tap -record d discussions with moth r , brings the comm'J­nit)' into the clas room. Panel par­tic:ipan who repr sent a vari ty of econom ic, ocial and thnic group , offer th ir p ronal id as about

den tists and dental care; other panel groups introduc the profes­sional sp cialist from the :\linneap­olis and t. Paul ar as to the stud n .

Th tape-r cord d intervi ws with moth r reveal orne of the probl m parents fae in providing ad quatc health care for their fam­ilie . L ast spring, in ~Iinneapolis D r. amuels interviewed 355 black, white and Indian third grader

OFFICIAL RINGS Of THE

UNIVERSITY Of MINNESOTA

OFFICIAL MINNESOTA RING - Selected by the Boord

of Directors of the Minnesota Alumni Association os the

official alumni design . The 10K Gold Ring is set with maroon

synthetic Garnet. Minnesota Side d isplays the University Seal

with the Golden Gopher and Minn esota " M". Your g raduation

date appears ot the top. Un iversity Side features No rthrop

Aud ito ri um combined with elements for most of the colleges.

Acodemic Deg rees appear on this side . Greek leiters or club

emblems may be encrusted on the stone.

PRICES TO MEMBERS :

(Postoge included)

Men's Ring, Open Back

Men 's Ring , Closed Back

Women's Ring (Miniature of Men's)

Women's Din ner Ring

For White Gold, odd

$38.90

4 1.00

32.00

32.00

Ub.ral Arh

Encrusting: 2 Gr~k Leiters

Encrusting: 3 Greek Leiters

5.00

3.00

5.00

Non-Member prices are slightly higher; write for information.

Medical or Oent.1 {with DDS I

La ..

(Because of Gold situation, pr ices subject to change without notice .)

MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 205 Coffman Memorio l Union, University 01 Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. 55455

Enclosed please fond my check or money order fo r $ Plea se send my Minnesota Ring, postpa id, and made up as indicated below:

Finger Sizo>.- Yr. Gro~ Degreo>.-

Open Style __ Clased __ Greek Leller,-----

I am a member_ Serial No _______ _

Name ________________ _

Addressss'--______________ _

City, ______ State.e _____ -LZip---

o All University

o Medical

o Dental

o IT 0 Law

o Liberal Arts

o Business

o Engineering

o Marris 0 Duluth

o Wamen 's Dinner Ring

o Women's Miniatu re

o White Gold

(Note: Minnesoto Residents add 3 00 soles tox .)

from th middl and cla s s and from welfar In discus ions of d ntal di t , th childr n andidl a gr at d al about th ir hom

nvironment attitud s, h alth practices and xp ri !lces that m ay h lp th futur d nti t d al with hildr n's f ar of d ntist.

Th D ntal chool i not only University unit to turn to th , communi for in truction . L a t S ptemb l' the niv rsit ' ffi c of Community Program initiated th ultural duca tion p iali t program in som of its our s dealing with pov rty, and so ial and thnic probl ms.

The sp ciali t , g n rall from a minority or pov rty group, "is an alticulat p rson who can de crib and explain minority-group id a and attitudes," aid rthur H arkin , a coordinator in th Office of munity Programs. "H e an relat acad mic ubj cts to r alities , al­though he is not a form ally train d or acad mically liccn ed instruc­tor."

One of th first las s to u cultural ducation p cialist wa an education cours - chool and Soci ty - requir d of all edu 'ation majors. The stud nt isited Th ' Way, a north linn apoli commu­nity c nt r, and it director oft n cam to th Univ rsity to sp eak with the tud nts.

"H e spoke fr ly," Harkins said, "about th e black man'. re pons to formal education , and r lated it to politics, conomic and social prob-1 ms. The purpose of hi visits was not to 9,iv him th la t word, but a word.

Community r sour peopl coming into the Univ rsity is not n w. What is n w about the ul­tural du ation sp cialist is that he is a regular part of th teaching taff, having qual tatus with th

professor in a cla that thc pl an and tea h togeth 1'.

The sp cialists thus far hav m t with gr at succ ss in Univ rsit

ducation, so iology, 0 ial work and Am rican Indian stucli .

we present

THE INDISPENSABLE BLAZER

TAILORED OF EXCLUSIVE BROOKS-KNIT

Brooks-Knit is a blend of polyester and worsted

developed for us by a noted French knitting mill.

In appearance it differs only slightly from a woven

cloth ... but it performs as only a knitted fabric will:

stretching at points of tress for extraordinary com­

fort, and defying wrinkling and cru hing to an

amazing extent. We have tailored Brooks-Knit on

our cla sic blazer with welted edges and brass but­

tons. In navy. $125

We also offer Brooks-Ktlit i1t 0111' own make suits in oxford grey or navy. Coat) vest and trousers) $185

ESTAIILlSHED 1818

74 E. M A DI S T, N R. MI C III A AVE., III AGO, ILL. 60602

ATLANTA ' BOSTON ' LOS AN(.~ LI • NHV YOR K

PITTSIl I{ .JI' S·IN F R/I N IS O ' S ARSDAI.F · IVAS III NGT N

TILE UNIVEIISITY OF ML'f, ' ESOT A

(-"OUNDED IN TlIE FAmr nlAT MEN ARE ENNOBLED

RY l1NDEnsTANDING DEDICATED TO TIlE ADVANCEMENT

OF LEARNING A 0 TIlE SEARCH Fon TRUTH

DEVOTED TO TIIE INSTRUCTION OF YOUTH

AND THE WELFARE OF THE STATE

THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Edwin L. Hoislet '31 BSEd '33MA '38EdD

EXECUT IVE COMM ITTEE James A. Watson '42BA Harry Heltzer '33MetE Richard E. Kyle '27llB Irene 0 Kreidberg '30BBA Wallace L. Boss ' 28BSBus Kenneth C Glaser '42BBA Hermon J. Arnott '24BA John E. Carroll '33BChem J. Roscoe Furber '24EE .... Oscar R. Knutson '271lB George T. Pennock '34BA Carl Plotou 'SIMHA BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Executive Director

President First Vice President

Second Vice President Secretary Treasurer

Past President Board Member Board Member Boord Member Board Member Board Member Board Member

Term expires 1970: Carl M. Anderson '27BA '30llB, Francis M. Bodey '30BA '36MA '39PhD, Wallace l. Boss '28BSBus, Kenneth C. Glaser '42BBA, Mrs. Dix ie Ingersoll Gas> 'ISBA, Florence M. lehmonn '23BA, Melvin 0 Sletten '3SDDS, William F. White '49BAJourn. Term expires 1971 : Harry Heltzer '33METE, Oscar R. Knutson '27llB, Irene D. Kreidberg '30BBA, Sheldon M. logoord '41 BA '43MB '43MD, Mrs. Jeannette R. Piccord '42PhD, Bryon Smith '2SBS '2SMA, James A. Watson '42BA, Hermon Welch '33BSAg, Carl Woie 'SOBEE, Howard

F Woo '27BA '31 BArch. Term expires 1972: Hermon J. Arnott ' 24BA, William O. Carlson NG, J. Roscoe Furber '24EE, Mrs. Violet Rosocker Grol '33-'37, John Has> '33llB, Maynard A. Speece '43BSAgEd, Patrick J. Turner '48BSEd, Charles H. Withers 49BAJourn. Term expires 1973: Fred Agnich '37BA, Harry Atwood '31 BA, Rolph E. Britigon '40MD, John E. Carroll '33BChem, Gerold H. Friedell '49BA 'SIJD, Honorable Joseph Koresh '29BA, Melva lind '24BA '43MHA, Donald W . MeMoore 'SI BSEd, George T. Pennock '34BBA, Carl Plotou 'S IMHA, Jock Stromwall 'SOBA. REPRESENTING THE CONSTITUENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS: L. Jean­nette Wiggs 'SOAlA, President, Minnesota Alumnae Club; Russell Stans­field '48BSAg, President, College 01 Agricultu re, Forestry and Home Eco­nomics Alumnle Associa tion; Marton C. Mosiman '40BBA, President, School 01 Business Adm inistration Alumni Association; Dr. Donald H Nelson 'S2DDS, Presiden t. School 01 Dentistry Alumni Associat ion; Ray 5 Forstad '60BSEd, President, Coliege 01 Education Alumni Association ; Dr. leonard S. Arling ' 36MD, President, Medical Alumni Associa­tion ; Keith Nordby '47 AMS, President, Mortuary Scie nce Alumni Association ; Grace E Gahdes '43BSNE '60MEd, PreSident, School 01 Nurs­ing Alumnae Association ; Thomas J . Novak ' 42BSPhm, President, College 01 Pharmacy Alumni ASSOCia tion; Paul Hetland 'S6BA, President, Col­lege 01 liberal Arts and UniverSi ty College Alumni Association; Roland D. Wardell '49BMETE, President, Institute 01 Technology Alumn i Association; Milton C. Stensland 'S4BS 'S6DVM, President, Veterinary Medical Alumni Association; Elizabeth V. Hunt 'S2MSW, President, School 01 Social Work Alumni Association ; Mrs. Gold ie Wilensky '39GDH, PreSident, Dental Hyg iene Alumnae Association ; Ellsworth T. Swanson 'S9AA, President, General College Alumn i Association; Mrs. Frances Hanson '3 1 BS, President, Division 01 Medical Technology Al umni As­sociation ; John R. Finnegan '48BA '6SMA, President, School 01 Journalism & Mass Communications Alumni Association; Gerald l. Moritz '68UMC, President , University 01 Minnesota, Crookston, Alumni Association . REPRESENTIN G NON ·CO NSTITUENT GROUPS: Gerald E. Magnuson 'SI BBA 'S4lLB, President, Law Alumni Association; Wally Salavich, President OM' Club. PAST PRESIDENTS AND ALUMNI FUND ADVISORY COMMITTEE Russell E. Backstrom '2SBSME '27MSME, William F. Braasch 'OOBS '03MD, Wendell T. Burns '16BA, Victor Christgau '24BSAg, George Earl '06BA '09MD, Kenneth C. Glaser '42BBA, Franklin D. Gray '2S BA, Waldo E. Hardell '26BSBus, Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA, Hibbert M. Hill '23BSCE, Arthur R. Hustad ' 16BA, Francis A. lund '3 1-'3S, Virgil J . P. Lundquist '43MD, Joseph Moun '32BA '3SlLB, Harvey Nelson '22BS '2SMD, Charles Judd Ringer '38-'41 , Glenn E. Seidel '36ME, Edwin A. Willson '30BEE, Wells J . Wright '36BSL '36LLB, Edgar F. Zelle '13BA. HONORARY LIFE ASSOCIATION MEMBERS Dr. J . l. Morrill , Presiden t Emeritus 01 the Un iversity; Willia m T. Middlebrook, Vice President Emeritus 01 the Universi ty; Dr. O . Mere­d ith Wil son; Gerald T. Mullin .

THE U lVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

ALUMNI NEWS

(Our 69th Year)

APRIL , 1970 VOL. 69, N O.8

Point of View

MAA Election Ballot

8

10

11 omination for MAA Board of Director

14

19

The ffiuent Alumnu - 1970

lumni Per p cti e: Matter of Self-Intere t

22 Ma Mo e to 'Control" ROTC Program and Statu

_4 Reg nt pprove Vital Edu ational-Affiliation with Ma 0

_6 "A 1indle Act of andali m"

27 Da e hama' Goph r T al

T Help R 01 Th CUff nt Dilemma f Ph ician

30 i it Th Go mor' Man i n

3 L The lumni

34 r und ' Ab ut

Mary Lou Aurell '62BAJourn

Edw in L. Haislet '31 BSEd '33MA '37EdD

Editor

Managing Editor

Second class postage paid at Minneapolis, Minn., under Act of Congress 01 March 3, 1879. Annual dues 01 the Association are S10 01 which $8 constitutes a year's subscription to the Alumni News. Subscription lor non·olumni: S 10 per ye.ar. National a d­vertising representatives: American Alumni Magazines, New York . N.Y. Publisher: Minnesota Alumni Association , 205 Coffman Union, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455 .

Continuing the Minnesota Alumni Weekly which was estab­lis hed in 1901, the Minnesota Alumni Voice and the Gopher Grad. Publ ished monthly from September through June by the Min nesota Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Union , University 01 Minnesota , Minneapolis, S545S. Member 01 the American Alumni Council .

POINTS of I11111111111111111111111111111111111 111111111 1111 11111 11111111 11111

VIEW ED HAISLET Executive Director

8

What is the purpose of an alumni association? This question is raised from time to time by alumni in response to membership or fund requests.

Often they infer that the alumni office is interested in all things unimportant - and then most often they mention football and class reunions.

No doubt their image of alumni is as is often portrayed in the motion pictures, that of the old col­lege grad, in a racoon coat waving a college banner, or an alumni reunion with those present wearing silly hats and making out like they are not old grads. That's not a picture of today's alumni - if it ever was. Both football and reunions have a proper place in an alumni program. Football is the one great common denominator, and when our football team does well, there is a general increase in alumni spirit and support; likewise a gathering of alumni, a reunion for instance, is an important channel of communication with a particular segment of the alumni body, a way to get alumni back to the campus and to think about the University.

Actually the work of the alumni association, its many programs and activities are guided by objectives as set forth in the Articles of Incorporation of the Association - the overall objec­tive being the support of the University and its many needs.

While Association objectives are clearly defined in its articles of incorporation, it is true that they have not been widely disseminated. Therefore, the question raised is a valid one - what is the purpose of the alumni association?

Article II of the Articles of Incorporation states that the purpose of the Minnesota Alumni Associa­tion, Incorporated is:

• To cooperate in maintaining the University of Minnesota's leadership among American uni­versities.

• To assist in securing every reasonable financial support that the needs of the University of Minnesota require.

• To support the administration of the University of Minnesota in carrying out its educational policies and program of service to the people of the State of Minnesota.

• To keep graduates and former students adequately and correctly informed regarding the affairs of the University of Minnesota.

• To develop a program of cooperation with alumni of the University of Minnesota, who, as individuals or groups, desire continuing educational service such as may be made available through the departments of the University of Minnesota.

AL 1 IE\\',

• To work toward broadening educational opportunity for youth through the sponsorship of a

scholarship program.

• To lend support to worthy student projects and activities and to assist students of the Univer­sity of Minnesota in every way possible.

• To bring alumni back to the University of Minnesota campus as often as possible through planning and arranging special programs, events, occasions, meetings, reunions and the like.

• To sponsor and develop University of Minnesota Alumni chapters throughout the state and nation so as to bring the University to its alumni.

• To provide the opportunity for graduates of the University of Minnesota for annual giving to the University through the Alumni Fund.

• To bring service and educational programs to the University of Minnesota alumni body not otherwise obtainable.

• In furtherance of the foregoing purposes, to accept. receive. hold, invest. reinvest. manage and administer gifts, legacies. bequests. devices , funds and property of any kind or nature , without limitation as to amount or value; to use. employ. apply. expend and disburse. by donation or otherwise. the income and principal thereof. exclusively for the express pur­poses of this corporation.

These objectives guide the many alumni programs and activities sponsored by the Minnesota Alumni Association. the Department of Alumni Relations and the Alumni Fund. Such programs are evaluated each year, and new and b e tter ways to achieve objectives are constantly being developed.

----------------,

MINNESOTA

CIGARETTE

LIGHTER

By Park . Smart gold finish bears

the Regents' Sea l on one side and

the Minnesota Gopher embossed

in ma roon on the other. An excel-

lent gift for you rse lf or a frien d .

Uncond itionally guaranteed for

life. Members $2.95; others $3.95.

(Add 3 00 State E cise To TO TOTAL. Min­

nesota residents only.)

Minnesota Alumni Association

205 Coffman Union University of Minnesota

Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

Enclosed plea se find my check

for $ ___ _

Kindly send ... Minnesota lig ht­er(s)

Name (in full ) _______ _

Add ress

City ___ State -Zip __

o I am a member

,--------------------------------'-----------------PRIL, 1970 9

THE MINNESOTA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

* * E BALLOT ***

* **** El eTI

The accompanying list of 10 candidates (nomi­nated for the five positions that will be vacated on the MAA Board of Directors) is hereby certified as correct. Each Association member will vote for no more than five (5) candidates. (Signed)

James A. Watson '42BA, Chairman Albert H. Heimbach '42BBA Richard E. Kyle '27LLB Irene D. Kreidberg '30BBA Edwin A. Willson '30BEE Members of the Nominating Committee

BAllOT----------------------------- 1. Place (X) opposite each

person for whom you wish to

vote . Do not vote for more than

five (5) candidates or your bal­

lot cannot be counted.

BRUCE ABRAHAMSON '49BArch St. Paul, Minnesota

DR. LYLE A. BRECHT '39DDS Minneapolis, Minnesota

FRANKLIN BRIESE '28LLD St. Paul, Minnesota

ROBERT G. CERNY '32BArch Excelsior, Minnesota

J. BRAINERD CLARKSON '31JD Minneapolis, Minnesota

CHARLES T. McGARRAUGH '37BBA Edina, Minnesota

DR. R. HUGH MONAHAN '43MD St. Paul, Minnesota

DR. A. E. RITT, '33MD St. Paul, Minnesota

HENRY N. SOMSEN, JR. '32BA '34LLB New Ulm, Minnesota

BARBARA STUHLER '52MA .... St. Paul, Minnesota

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

,------------------------------------10

2. Ballot need not be signed,

but name and address must ap­

pear on the envelope containing

the ballot. It is important that

your name be legible.

3. Clip ballot and send to

Executive Director, Minnesota

Alumni Association , 205 Coffman

Memorial Union, University of

Minnesota, Minneapolis , Minne­

sota 55455.

For assured secrecy in sub­

mitting ballots, the mailing en­

velopes should be marked " BAL­

LOT" or enclosed within the

mailing envelope in a separate

envelope so marked. All enve­

lopes so marked will be opened

only by the election tellers.

4. Ballot must be in the office

of the Executive Director by May

21 in order to be counted.

\J CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!

AL I I E\

Select And Vote Today 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

MAA BOARD CANDIDATES

CliO E our voice in th' ~!inn 'ota Jumui S oeiation -cast OUI vot for th Board of Directors candidat todn) !

The ten candidates who are named and d crib d b !ow have be n nominat d this ear for th five po ition that \ ill be va a ted on the Board, th gO\'crning b dy of th s ocia­tion and th ourc of its officers.

ABRAHAMSON 11111111111111111111

PlUL, 1 70

Th voting period officially 0]) ns all receipt by AI mem­bers of their copies of this pril issue of th lumni \ s. 11 ballots must be in the office of ~I Ex cuti e Dir ctor Ed Hai 1 t b. ~lay 21 in order to b counted. Th r ult of the 1 ction \ ill b announced of-

ficially at th ociation' n-nual ~[e ting on Jun 2,

~linne ota, r ceived his ~[a t r of rchit ture from Harvard oiv r­

ity in 1951, and a Rotch Travelling cholar hip for dvanc d tudy in

Europ in 1952. brahamson ha di tingui hed him elf both a a working archit ct and a a cholar in his profe ion,

BRECHT 1111111111111111111111111111111111

DR. LYLE . BRE HT '39DD , an a, ociat profc or of ro\\"n and bridg for c\' ral ~ c.u at th ni­\ er. it\" hool of Denti 'tn, i Ul'­

rentl~' a praeti iner d nti t' in ~lin­n 'a1 oli a \\'11 a hairman r. the D ntal HaIth ar ommitt(' f th \ linne ota tat Dental 0-

iation . a member of the bard f

The 1970 nominating comrnit­t consist d of J arne ,v atson '42BA, cbairman, Ibert H . H eimbach, '42BB , Richard E. Kyle '27LLB Ir n D, Kreidberg '30BBA and Edwin ,Willson '30BEE.

The official ballot - to be filled in and return d b ou to the Alumni Ollic for t~bulating­appear on the pr ceding page,

dir ctor of the D Ita D ental Plan of :\linne ota a.nd of th :\linne ota Pro thodontic oci t\', and a f 1-low of th Am rican Colle e of Dentist and the Int rnational Col­I e of D ntist , Dr. Br cht, who

er\'ed in th "Army D ental Corp from 19-12 to 1946: has eli -played continuou dedicat d lead r-hip in hi prof ion, haVing rved

as pI' id nt of th :\[innl' ota tatl' Dental A ociation, the :\linn ota Academ\' of R torative D ntism' and the' ~1iJ.U1 apoli District Den­tal oden', H i also a member of Omi ron 'Kappa pilon, honorary dental frat min',

BRIESE 111111111111111111111111111111111111

11

FR -KLI BRIE E '28LLD, chai rman of th board and pres i­d nt of the linn ota Mutual Lif In manc Company, bas sp nt hi ntir bu inc s career with linne­

sota Mutual, beginning in 1928. H is al 0 a dir ctor of th orth­\Ves t 1'11 National Be nk of t. Paul, Titl Insurance Company of finn­sota, Iurphy Financ ompan,

linn sota F d ral aving and Loan ociation and First ~lid­west apital Corporation. In addi­tion to ex cutive involv ment in a number of trad asso iations , Bri s is CUlT ntly a memb I' of th 0-

mol" Sta t Inv tm nt Board ad­i ory committee, a tru tee and

memb r of th executive ommitt of harl s T. Mill r Hospital, tr a-sur I' of Capital ntr Asso iate , and a clirector of orth tar R -s arch & D velopment Institut and th gr ater t. Paul nit d Fund & Council. In 196 h \Va

t. Paul's Boss of th Year.

CERNY 1111111111111111111111111111111111111

12

CLARKSON 111111111111111111111111111 11

MCGARRAUGH 11 11111111111 111111

linn apoli s, \ as initially an audi­tor with th ac ounting firm of

rthur nd rs nand ompany foI-l \ ing graduation from th ni r-it . II > join 'd . orthwe t rn in

1941, 1 gi11l1in' a car r patt ' l'll th at had b n ct sinc hi ' nr t joh out-of-higb- hool. ft I' hi bank­ing car r w , int rruptcd by s r-

ic ' in lh <1\')' from 19-t3 to 1946, 1 · arrnugh r turned to

orthwesl rn and w • . nam d assis­tant 'ashi er in 194 , as istant \'i c president in 1951, \ icc president in 1952 and to hi s present p iti n in 196 . Tb ' p a t pI' id ' nt f lh '

cho I [Business Administrati n 11ll1lni . ocinlion ha. \\ rkc 1 10-

callv and nation ally [or Rob rt l[o;Tis s · 'intes , <1,; as 0 iation of

senior ba nk ill · I'S, sin c j ining them in 1957, as well a involVing him elf in nUIlll'l'OU ivic and Olll-

1l111nit ' afl'airs.

MONAHAN 11111111111111111111111111 1

a pra ti -

L M I EW

ing ophthalmologist ha b en in tcaching eye pathology, medical administmtion, promoting pro­gram at the ni rsit, de lop­ing ncw m thod for the d Ii r of health care through u of alIi d h alth per on11 I, public health, pre-ch 01 urv y, glaucoma creen­

ing, de eloping olwlte r e e care programs in targ t ar a and a vohmteer m dical car program for d 'pri\'cel ar as of th worlel. The pa t pr ident of the tdinne ota ~f dical . ILU11ni so iation and r cipient of th itation of

Ierit, ha tucli d and present d pap'r throucrh lit th ,0rl1.

RITT 1111 II II 11111111111111111111111111111111

DR. LBEHT E. HlTT "3~lD, who rctir c1 in 1965 aft r 33 year of private g('neral pm ti (in t.

PHIL, 1970

Paul, is actively involved in several business, civic and community re­sponsibility sectors. The president of the Falcon Heights State Bank of St. Paul and preSident and chair­man of the board of 1idway a­tional Bank of St. Paul, is also the tr asurer and a board member of th lorth rn Association for l edi­cal Education and the Family HaIth Foundation of America. mcmb r of the University's scholar-hip committ e for three year , Dr.

Hitt received the St. Paul Chamber of Commerce's Outstanding Citizen

ward. H is a past president of the Rams y County ~fedical 0-ci , th finnesota cadem)' of Gen ral Practice and the American

cad my of General Practice as well a a past delegate to the

merican ~fedical sociation and the Iinne ota tate ~fedical so-ciation.

SOMSEN 11111111111111111111111111111111

his student days. a past president of the New UIm Industries, Inc. and the ew UIm Community Con­cert Association, he is also asso­ciated with the nion Ho pital As­sociation, the ew 1m Memorial Foundation, Inc., the :Ylinnesota

tate Parks Foundation and the Iinnesota Advisory Council on tate Parks. Somsen is also a mem-

ber of the Capital Area Architec­tural Planning Commission.

STUHLER 1111111111111111 1111111111111 1

~fI '52~ 1 , since 1950 a ociate direc­tor of th \Yorld AHairs C nter,

niver it)' Exi: nsion Di'vi ion, ha b n acti,'e in community aHairs erving a a member of th board

of director of th itiz n League and a fir t \'ice pre ident of the L ague of "om n \ oter of }din­nota. Pre entlv a tn.! t e of the Leagu' education fund, in 1967 he headed the d 1 gation of ex­

cbaIwe b twe n the League and tlle o\'i t 'omen' ommittee. r.li tubl r was appoint d bOtll b ' Governor Fre man and nder-

n to th state' Fail' Employ­onuni ion. In

196, ecr tar . of tate Dean Ru k appointed h r to th

0111111i ion for IE O. hi' a 111 mb l' of thc ex utiye committe and hairman of th 111 mb r hip ommitt . In 1961 h \Va th

fir t woman to pmu ip_ t in th II x vVilton Park onfer n e ' on

international affair.

13

THE AFFLUENT ALUMNUS

1970

AFFLUE CE is a word that has many s ns s, all of which indica te abundance.

fHuence onnotes a ubstantial incom and a fr e xp nditUl' of re OUl'ces. It i a word that is oft n

int l' hang d with wealth. It is also a word that an b a ily applied to th

alumni of the Univ l' ity of finn ota - not b caus Minn sota alumni hay a corner on th riches of th country, nor b e aus they ar lavish in th ir expendi­tur s.

Minnesota alumni poll d in th 1970 fEu nt Alum­nus qu stionnaire did show an av rag incom well abov th U.S. p r capita of $3,412, as w 11 as a high pcrc ntag of hom own rship and strong financial in­vol v m nt in automobil s, curities and insuranc .

These characteristics alon could allow us to call finn ota alumni "affluent" when we ompar them

with th national av rag s r lating to mon y involve­m nt.

Y tour qucs tionnair r veal d Otll r fa ts - and im­plications - that unques tion ably show that Minn sota alumni ar ind ed an aillu nt group.

Of th n arly 10 p r nt of Minn sota Alumni A so­ciation m mb rs who re turn d th surv y ques tion­nair , th majority held d gre from th Coll g of Lib ral rts. Th p I' 'cntag s of r turns from th variou oll gia t units of th ni v rsi ty w r as follows:

14

11 g of Lib ral Its Institute of Technology ColI g of Edu ation

hool of Busin dminis tration chool of M di in

Graduat School In titute of Agri ultur

hool of Law hool of D nti try

School of W ' ing hool of Pharmacy

f dic. l Sci n s Dulutll Campus

n ral ColI g S hool of So ial v ork

chool of rchit tur chool of Veterinary dicine

The

20.1% 15.3% 14.1% 13. 6.9% 6.6% 5.9% 3.4% 2.9% 2.7% 2.1% 1.9 1.3% 1.1% 1.0% .9% .7%

tll

Th gr atest p rc ntag of th respond nts wcr b ­tw n th ag s of 46 and 50 (12.3 P r nt) , whil th ag groups of 51-55, 26-30, 36-40, and 31-35, r sp -ti I , w l' litt! mol' th , n a full p r ntug pint away [rom th I ading group. Thi hould allo, us to

ALUM I EW

peculat that th m dian ag of our r spondents is in th Iat 30's to arly 40's.

As in surv y year pass d, a great r number of men than wom n return d th survey: 3.2 men as oppos d to 16. wom n.

numb r of women who did return the question­nair asked that w includ th category of "house­wif " und r a cupation. On of them wrote: "It might b int resting to find out how many housewiv s did not fill in this surv y . . . ( it ) is obviou Iy not inter­e t din hou wive or who th y marri dl "

Th gr at r number of alumni are married, 77.2 p rcent; while 17.6 percent li t d themselve as single. , lumni families tend to have two children, on -fifth of whom ha e also att nded or ar att nding th Uni r­sit a their parent did.

The urvey re cal d, a to numb r of childr n that married alumni hay :

Two children Thr childr 11

a children On child

(Th remaining ha ing four or mar

24. % 21.1$ 18.5% 15.6%

children. )

s to th age of th children, 19.3 perc nt were b t\ en 11-15, 1 .4 P rc nt 0 er 25, 17.3 P rcent be­twe n 6-10, and 26.4 percent b tween ages 16-25.

lumni families ar inc rea ing th ir travel for plea­sur : 40.2 p r ent mar than twic dming the ear and 32. p rc nt, thr e tim or mor . More than 50 perc nt of the time thc will u e their cars for plea ure jaunt. , with air tray I as a second choice.

nd, although dom tic trav I, for both plea ur and bu in s, take up over 75 p rc nt of alumni mil age, for ign travel is on the in r ase - 28.2 percent, mar than fivc p r entag point ov r 1969.

Th mar than 60 p rc nt of alumni who tra el up to fiv times a year for busin s purpo fa or the plane 56.7 p rc nt a r tb automobile, 3 .2 perc nt.

\Vhcn au can id r th number of trips taken for bu ine purpo during the year by alumni, it follow that tb gr at t p r entag of th SUI e r span dents would b mpl0 ' d in bu ine s and industry:

Bn iness & Industr ' Education M di al ieoc

overnm nt

27.3% 22.4$ 16.1% 14. ~%

Thc leading area of mploym nt in ach major occu­pation atcrrOr \ ,1S overnm nt - f d ral, BLl ine and Industry - admini trati e ex uti c, Edu ation-Profes oriaL and I di al i nee - pra ti al.

v r 64 p rent of the alumni iudi at d that the. \ er mplo. 'ed in the fi eld that they -tudied \ hil in allege, and the gr at r number had b n with th ir un III mplo)'er fr tTl six to ten ' ar . In d ndinrr

PRIL, 1970

AS AN INDIVIDUAL,

the affluent alumnus is be­

tween the age of 46 and 50, is

married and has two children.

He is most often employed in

business and industry, in

an administrative position, or

in the education field. He has

been at his current job from

six to ten years, often supervis­

ing at least five people. He

owns his home in a metropolis

where he has been for more

than 25 years.

He has two cars that he most

often drives on the roadways

of Minnesota, for pleasure. He

prefers to fly for business trips,

and is increasing his travel

abroad.

• •

15

FINANCIALLY ...

the affluent alumnus earns

close to $15,000 a year. He

values his home at $30,000 to

$40,000. He is most likely to

have substantial securities, in

stocks or mutual funds. He also

maintains a checking and a

savings account. He carries life

insurance in the amount of

$50,000 to $99,999, and hospital­

ization, usually unde'r a group

plan.

16

order of p r en tag s, oth r had b en with th ir prcs-nt job from thrc to fi ar , from on to two y'ars,

or mor than 25 year . arI 60 p IC nt f th working alumni ar in

up rvi ory po ition , on -third of whom dir ct th a ti ities f on to fiv oth r p 1'son .

A major portion of r spond nts have s ttled to work in a metropolis which is indicativ of th larg num­bers of linn sota alumni \ ho ar locat d in the fl vc­county area surrounding th Twin iti . lightl more than 20 perc nt re id in a mali cit , whil n a1'h that p rc ntag are in a m dium- ized cit)'. ' '''h n Iinne ota alumni choos a commlmity 111

whi h to live, th t nd to stay in that communi!:) -indicating a tabilit that go along with th ir c ffiu­

nc . Ov r 27 percent hay be n in their home com­m'.mitie more than 25 ),ear , 14. P rc nt from 11 to 15 year and 11.8 percent from 3 to 5 y ars.

nd th first tate of th ir l' id nc choic lin-nota, th location of th ir alma mater.

Minn sota California Illinoi IIichigan

w York 'Visconsin p nns Ivani. Maryland Texa FI rida Massa hu etts

50.4% 10.9%

4. % 3.3% 2.4% 2.2% 1.9% 1.9% 1. % 1.5% 1.5%

Over 73 P rcent of th alumni r pond nt indicat d that th y owned their hom , with 0 r 55 p r nt valuing th m at $30,000 to $40,000; $40 000 to 50,000 and $20,000 to $25,000, re p cti el),.

Alumni 0\ n r hip of F rds no d out that of h v­rol t again this, car: 20. p r nt to 19.1 p r nt. And alumni Ollnt on to two cars in th ir famil),. Slightly more than 46 I ere nt claim owner hir of two automobil , and 44.1 p rc nt of one.

More alumni have an older mak car this year than in pr vious years of thi urv , a fact which ma b a eountabl to th incr a ing own rship of two cars. Ov r 30 p rc nt indi at d ars f the vintag 1961-65, whil 21.5 p re nt indi ,t d 1969 models and 18.7 p ' )' nt 1968 mod Is.

How mu I money do s tll affiuent alumnus make? Th f1 I ading at gori 's of gross annual income, a . 'ording to th 1970 surv , are:

$10,000-15,000 ~O.l%

$15,000-20,000 1 .7% $ 7,500-10,000 12.8% $20,000-25,000 12.6% $25,000-30,000 10.2%

LUM I EW

v r 14 p rc nt of th r spond nts indicated that th y mak 0 r , 30,0 p r) ar.

And th yin t th ir mon y, as 0 r 7 perc nt aid that th )' own d s c riti s.

Th majorit - 57.1 P r nt - of the curitie ar in sto ks; 33. p rc nt in mutual funds ; 25.2 p rc nt in r al stat; and 0 r 3 p rc nt in bonds and other holding.

arl ' 100 p rent of 1in11<.' ota alumni maintain checking accounts - 9 . P rc nt said "y ". nd 90.7 p rc nt hay avings a counts; whil 19.3 p rc nt said that th y had b'U t ac ounts.

Th amount of life insuranc an alumnu carries tend to averag approximat 1 30,0 :

50, 99,999 22. % 30,000-49,999 20.3%

$10,000-19,999 14.2% ~0,000-29,999 12. ~ 5, 9,999 7.2%

lor than 1 , 9.9%

gain, clo to 100 p rc nt carry ho pitalization insur­an : 97.4 p rcent, and 9.3 perc nt indicat d that it \\'a in the group in uran ' cat gory.

Politi ally, th alumni l' pondcnts I' main, in th majorit , R publican, althouah th 1970 sur indi­cat a political shift that Illi ht occur in th 1972 national lcction.

\Vbile 52.3 per nt of til alumni aid that th y were Republican by party affiliation, 19. that the. w re D ' Il) rat and 27.1 perc nt Ind p nd nt Ie than half f th r pondent indi at d that they would vot R publi an in th 1972 I ction as ompar d to th lightl ' mor than 50 p rc nt \\'h aid th y would in

1969.

gain, as in 1969, n arl)' 70 p l' ent aid that they did not vot a trai ht party ti k t in 196 .

nd indication of a po ible political hili oc­urring in th afBu nt alumni bod~' i th ir 1970 re­pon to th ir curl' nt politi aI, 0 ial and e onomic

thin1.ing in e lea ing th ni\'c r it)' :

tlor con ervati 19.6% bout th am 49.7% lore lib ral 30.7%

jell deer es increa

PRIL, 1970

liberal thinking i up 0\' r 9.

POLITICALL Y ...

the aflluent alumnus is a Re­

publican and voted as such in

the 1968 election - though he

usually did not vote a straight

party ticket. He should favor

the same party in the 1972

national election, although he

tends to as yet be undecided.

He is not an active worker

for his political party, and al­

though his political, social and

economic thinking is about the

same as when he attended the

University, he is tending to

become more liberal.

17

EDUCATIONALLY . ..

the affluent alumnus usually

holds an undergraduate de­

gree, but has continued his

education in a variety of formal

ways since leaving the Uni­

versity. He will probably work

toward an advanced degree.

He has returned to the Univer­

sity frequently since gradua­

tion, most often to visit but

also to attend classes, seminars

and meetings related to his

work. He has joined the Minne­

sota Alumni Association, in the

main, to support the University

and to ke·ep in touch with him

alma mater.

18

nd 13.9 P r nt ha arn d d gr outsid the 1.1 ual academi Ii ting.

Th 1970 r pond nt h w an awar n , not only of th ont mporar n d for advan d du ation , but al 0 for conrum d du ati n. arly 75 p rc nt said th< t th had ontinu d th ir du ation aft r their und rgraduat ar at th Univ r ity.

nd a numb r mad th comm nt on th qu tion­nair : "It inc ssar d"

Th great t numb r of tho ,ho have continued th ir du ation ha e don thl"Ough ening xten-ion our e , prof s ional sholt our s, seminar and

in- rvic training pro rams,' orkshop and If- tud) . n in r a ing number ar xt nding th ir in- rvice

prof ional training into a formaliz d ducation , and aming cr dits toward an advan d d gre . Th Y may

b doing so becau e man institutions of high r 1 .1m­ing, lik the niv r ity of finn sota, ar increa ing the numb r of busin -prof s ional off rina in seminars and short cour es outsid th ir tandard curriculums, that carr credits applicable to an advanc d d g' .

Do fim1esota alumni r tum to th campu aft r graduation? Th ir answ r is a d finite "y ". Ov r 77.2 p r nt aid that th y had b n ba k to the Univer ity, mo t oft n to i it friends, prof or and coll agl.l .

Y t n arl th am numb r said th had al 0 comp to att nd cla , seminars and work hop , or to , ork and to stud , or on bu in S. lumni rank d a f urlh, att ndanc of Uni rsity cultural nt that in Iud d on rts and I ctur s, and, as fifth , att ndan ni l' ity ports ents .

om unu ual comm nt from re pond nt on "h) th had returned to th ampu w re:

"To writ po try.' "To watch all th kooks around th r ." "To xplain th ni r ity to a good friend." And, as many l' turn d out of urio ity as returned

for Minn ota athl ti v nt . Ov rall athl ti att ndan \ as indi at d b 69 ....

r spond nts , who favor d football, ba ball hoek ), and ba k tball, r sp tiv I .

Why hay th alumni join d th finn ota Alumni A oeiation? 0 er 47.3 said that th did to UppOIt th Univ r it , and 36.2 p re nt, to support

the work of th alumni. Th ir Ii ling of oth r r ason for m mb l' hip w l'

al 0 trongly in SUppOIt of th Uni r ity: th majority saying that th y wer M m mb r in ord l' to b in touch with th Univ rsit .

nd om alumni l' spon w r indicativ of th alumni f ling of our afRu nt group - "It \\fa th thing to dol"

"I tak prid in th Univ rsity and f 1 an obligation to support it."

And, finally, "A good al man talk d ",h 11 '"

graduat dl"

ALUMNI NEWS

ALUMNI PERSPECTIVE Among University of Minnesota alumni are a number of articulate, influential individtUll.s in bu.siness, indu.stry, ducatian, cammunicatiol1S and the like. One of this

number, James 'Vatson, current MAA president, recently spok to the Minneapolis Sales and larketing Executives Club. His remnrks, thaugh delivered to the business sector, have reI vence and ramificatiol1S for all Minnesota alumni. The follOwing is a condensed portion of the insight given by the Gamble- kogmo president on the challenues and oppartunities of the 70's.

A MATTER OF SELF INTEREST • • •

I am me that ou are aware that whether we like it or not, ware in the biggest social re olution in the hi tory of

nited tal s. Thi is a revolution of gigantic proportions and fright ning implications to the futme of om country, but r volution that also could hold promise - if channeled consl:t1Jcli Iy.

I said you ar aware of this, but bow per onall involved ar ou? What is th differ nce b h een being aware and personally in 01 ed?

Hav you had om places of bu in ss picketed b radical group? Have ou had item ou II boycotted? Ha e you had to face up to the long-haired, screaming dissidents?

Hav 'ou b en accused of being an oppre sor becau e 'ou mploy p pIe? Hav ou had member of the cl rgy

accu e ou of being immoral and pray 0 er ou becau e ou won't join their bitter cru ade? Have ou had bo cotters marching around yom house?

To all of the e I would ha e to answer" es". At first involvement wa painful, but now it has become

both a challenge and an opportunity - a challenge to help in some mall \Va our sophi ticated stem of the 70's and an opportunity to improve m ' vista for the decade ahead.

Toda a growing minority of diver ent group ar attacking all gment of our ociety, trying in v ry way to overthrow and beat down the variou facet of om d mocrac . Thi i now ne\ to hi tOt '.

Th R man civilization collap d from man of the am inf ting our, and our civilization can likewi e

inlated un] s commw1icating peopl do omething about it.

Th bviou pIa to tart would b to a k for a listing of th group - of th people that are I' b lling again t society toda .

Th fir t Bv group ar lo nam . \ ha th gro - sick and til' d f P r ution and

fling \ ith a gr at deal of ju tiB ation that it i time the ar ac ept d a fir t-clas itiz n . Progr s in thi r gard i being m. de, but not fa t nough to comp nsat in their minds for the oppre sion th hav uffered in the past.

APRIL, 1970

The decade of the 70' should see us doing e\'ez;'thing possible as re ponsible citizens to brillu the various races into the American society as first-clas citizens. \Ve have no choice - it is only human and it is in the best intere ts of om society.

econdly, we have a large group, a growing group of di sident college students throuuhout the nited tates. \Vhy are the e tudent rebelling? Fortune mauazine attributes their actions to the fact that economic pressure has been removed. Theirs i a pecialldnd of rebellion - a hort-cut to involvement.

In om stru Ie for financial well-being, we have created an affiuence in which most of the student todav do not ha\'e the economic pre w-es of th tudent of ~'esterday.

The number of college tudent ha doubled in the last ten rear to reach 6,700,000. I olation is gone. The ivy walls have been tom down. minority ha become much more vocal becau e of number alone~ But, there are more reason.

TV and the other ophi tieated communications of toda 's living can mobilize, o,"emight, thou and of this di ident minority. The e young p ople are symptoms of an a.£Huent tudent ociety ,,;th little worry for their economic welfare.

The are dis iUu ioned ,,;th what the r think are their par nts' yalue and the ar unceltain. bout the futrne. They ar symptoms of ~vhat I r fer to a the po t-indu trial ociety where enrice \\rill r plaee indu try a a prime nlue.

Th tudent are deeply concerned about what the ha"e to look forward to dw-inu the next 25 Y ars, and if we examin the road we are n and don't chan'ge that road, y u can hardl ' blame tl1 m ... in a decade, urban dw II rs \\;11 hav to wear aa rna k to unrive air pollution unl a chang i made. If this tr nd continues, ometime in th lat 19 O's air pollution combined \\rith a temperatrn inver ion \\rill kill thou and of p opl in orne United

tat city. om tGn dw-ing the 19 0' , a major ecological v tern

oil or water will break down omewhere in the .: and n \ di a e that hun1an cannot re i t will reach plague

19

A group that really has the responsibility £or-------,

the social revolution today is us ... too many o£ us would have to admit that we haven't

done one thing about stopping it either.

propOltions. Increased carbon dioxid in the atmosphere will affect the earth's temperatme, leading to mas flooding or a n w ic age.

Th di ident colleg students see th e and many other dangerous to th ir actual existence and believ our gen ration i totally complacent. Consequently to t11 m, and particularly to the real dissid nt , anything goes - the nd justifi s the means. Th y don't know how to get to th nd, but know that om thing ha to happen. All they know i that unles things change - there i no futme.

The thi.rd group - the teacher or educator - are also oncem d with their own w II-being. At the present time,

it is impos ible to read a morning paper that doe n't r lat th story of college faculty I ading stud nt in a revolt again t the very institution to which they supposedly hav d dicated their knowledge and th ir efforts.

It is almo t equally impossible to read a morning pap r that do sn't tell of school tach rs striking even though the contracts they signed willingly are still legally and morally in £Fect.

These educators see thems lves as second class citizens with no future - with no influ nce - with no prestig .

In Russia and other totalitarian countries, teachers rate at the top of the economic and social ladders, both in influence and in compensation. In thi country th y rank well down. They are not paid a much. They are not given as much r sponsibility in the community. And they are Dot looked upon a the leaders of society.

Fomth is the clergy. Th y, too, are confused and looking for direction. They ar conc m d about the future and concern d about the appar nt loss of church inlluenc .

Yow1ger m mbers of the clergy, particularly, are joining r volutionary movements on very front, banishing semblances of fiscal and reasonable responsibility, and d dicating th mselves to what they believe is nee ssary revolution to help the poor and down-trodden. Instead of Fe ding souls, they are formenting revolution.

Th fifth group rebelling against our society is f ding on the sympathi s and frustrations of the others. This is a very mall, w ll-trained, highly intellig nt group of r volutionists dedicated to play on the ills of our society and to do everything possibl to over-throw all of our institutions, including our govemm nt.

Call them communists if you lik , but don't underrat them.

A sixth group that really has the r sponsibility for th social r vo lution today is us ... th immediate r action of many of you would be to say, "I have never in my life done on thing about leading a rebellion in this country."

That is true, but on the oth r hand, too many of us would have to admit that we haven't done one thing about stopping it either.

20

ctuall , ow· r pon ibility i v n greater than thi . We ar th most knowing, rna t talented, mo t xperi need COmmunicators to b found any\\ h r in the world. and

t w have not done a very good job of selling the American way of lif , nor Iling th public on some of the thing that mu t be don to make the social ch nge of the 70's orderly

groups \

chool . \V hool boards. who ar

xamine, \ e

EW

rcali:.:' thal p nnissiven s and lack of communication ha\ lo b ar some r sponsibiliLy.

onsid r th stud nt. II isn't wondering about \\ hat you and 1 wond r d about in school , h is wondering whether or nol h will b allow d to live 20 years from now. We can s t up lin s of communication and I t the stud nt know that we, too, ar conc m d \\iLh the futur .

W hay to take an int rest - mak our lves heard, and b com invol d and irnprO\ our invoh ment if we wish to continu the fr e enterprise system in the United

tat s. bviously, many groups, many brains and many plan will b n ded to solv the prohl m of the 70's. The treatm nt may b long, but society can u1'\i\'e. The tud nts of today will be the leaders of tomorrow, and

chang can b for the good rath r than th bad. \V must do our part toward making the change gradual

and for the better rather than cata trophic and destructhe \Ve have a r sponsibility to our country, to our children and to oursel e to assert our inLlu nc on the direction of social chang .

How do \ e become involved? Fil' t, by und r tanding thoroughly the other aroups' point of \ie\ , no matter who the are, by I arning to communicate with them, by tudying and knowing the pro < nd con of each problem

that come up, and by s tting up line of commwlication. Hcre in th Twin iti w ha\'e < major unhersity

who e administration is activ I)' seeking the ad\ice, coun. and h lp of busine . They want our suggestion as to cunicul urn , fonnat, proc dure , and the, want our participation both a indidduals <lnd a group. Let' gi\'e them our full upport and op 11 th line of commmunication al\ th way.

Ware currently in \ hat I all a "po. t-indu hial soci ty" - a soci Iy that [or the 6r t Lim in history ha the capacit) t d 'stroy its If, or to creat < n em ironment to perpetuate it elf at a high r tandard than ever b fore.

II i our r ponsibility 10 throw our eke into tlu probl m .mci b part of th chana rath r than ju l watch th m h, pp n. \Ve mu ttake a po ition and let our po ition b known.

\\'e can no longer b afraid to ha\'e our opinion public. \ e mu t think and onsid r Ih Yarious problems and th n h lp to tart a cour e of action.

We can b just a vocal- ju t as noi y - and a lot more inBu ntial than the group making all of III noise now. \Ve mll t dedi at our elves to h lp correct th ills of oLlr oci ty - not ju t talk abouL them - \\ith action, hard work.

and rna b [ gi [ation. , e rnu t fight to control the cology and. aye our

environm nt from d truction, and d dicat our. elYe to changes that can b con tructh and an do a gr at deal of good for a gr at number of peopl .

\ e mu t p n opportuniti for y nth to help them find th m h 'e and gi\ th m dire ti n. Listen. ndcr tand II Ip.

The opportuniti \ e must pr par to 111 r a de ad \\'h r ' man ha. full

ontr 1 of his mironm nt, and th ability to prolong hi lif and fulfill all hi ba ic ne I and concentrate on hi wants. PI. lllung for this de ad will b of the ulmo t imp rtan t \ r per on, orporation and or C7anization.

I ug r t that ach of)' II r - "amin your own p ronal planning for lh n xt d ad. We arc bcginninC7 the 70·s.

If improv m nt, b th in busin s· and in social invoh em nl, i a mu t not nl t com pet . but to 'uc eed -to Ii .

PRIL, 1970

Within a matter

of days ...

three significant

" confrontations"

occurred at

your University:.

The news stories

and University reports

on the next pages

affecting -

ROTC HEALTH SCIENCES BEAVER 55 I SDS

- concern you, the

Minnesota alumni.

WHAT IS YOIJR REACTION?

No legal requirement found for ROTC at Minnesota

Program may receive vocational rather than academic status

University could determine ROTC courses, stripping some of academic credit

UNIVERSITY MAY MOVE TO "CONTROL" ROTC PROGRAM AND STATUS

THE Hag-b aring military honor guard, traditionally a paIt of Uni­v r ity comm ncem nt cer monie , was absent at th spring e ercises on farch 21.

t a pre s bricfing arli r that day, Univ rsity President Moos had said th at a Univer ity committ recently r commend d the removal of military displays from University functions, and that h had asked ROTC officials if th color guard would participat without tll rifle they traditionally carry. The ROTC officials said that their unit would not, under thos conditions. And University faculty members were designat d for the color guard.

The committee of which Moos spoke was one, compris d of nine faculty m mb rs and fi ve student , speCially called by him to study University-ROTC r lationships 11 months ago. Its r port to th Un i­v rsity pr ident was mad public on March 11.

This r port not d that "th re is no I gal r quir m nt for ROTC at an institution such as the Univ rsity of Minnesota which an b deriv d from the Morrill Act of 1862."

Th Morrill Act's purpose was to stabli h at least on coil g in each

state that would tach, among oth r subj cts, "military tactics".

"There i nothing which states

22

how 'milit~lly tactic' would be taught, or by whom," th r poIt not s.

Th committe al 0 found that th r wa nothing in th f d ral or militar r poIts and agr m nt r ­lating to ROTC that oblig. t col­I ge and univer iti s to ha e a ROTC program.

The r port offered eight r com­m ndations that would apply to

rmy, Navy and ir For ROTC on the Twin Cities campu and th Air Forc ROTC on th Duluth campus, and maintain th program on th campu s in an alt r d form.

Th committe recomm nd d the continuation of th progr. m at th

niversity for two ba ic r a ons : th b Ii f th at the Univ r ity " ar­ri s a cl ar r pon ibility to do all it an to n ur that a compon nt of military offic rs have 'p ri n d th b st w an off r in high r edu­cation"; and, th b li f that tll

niv rsity "has a lib ralizing in­Bu nee on th pot ntial military offi er."

The com mitt also stat d that "to those who say that maintaining any relation with the military n ga-

LUMNI NE'

ha not k pt pa e with r c nt tr nds in ov rh ad r im burse-m nt";

nd, finally that "th con picu­ou participation of uniformed military p rs nn I in niv rsity

r moni s i not in k ping with th ss ntial charaet l' of acad mie functions."

To adju t and eorr ct th e d -£lei nci s th l' port off rs th fol-10\ ing ight r comm nelation :

RE I 'IE D TIO 1 Tb P culiar and p cial char-

a ter of th ROT d partm nt m~k it diffi ult to nnd a \ holl), sUltable admini trati 10 ation for them in th tructure of th ni­~' rsit)'. c~n i t nt with th pr vaU-109 pnnclple go" ming affiiliation of academic unit.

, th r for I' comm nd that th four R T d partm nt b re­con tituted a programs in the G n ral Ext n ion Divi ion of th

R T ommitt e would b

to r ommcnd appointm nt for ROT staff m mber to th dean of G n ral E ,t n ion; r eiv, val­uat and a t 11 any prop sal I' 1 -vant t th R T cW'riculum; and . ompl ~ely aluat th program f 111 truct\on from tim to tim .

Th numb r of coW' c that < r r gular 11i l' it , our and a:,ailabl for l' dit to any niv 1'­

lty student bould b in l' a ed

PRIL, 1970

and eonstitut th major portion of th on- ampu ROTC program.

ucb course as drill, weaponry and platoon leader hip and oth r acti iti s that ar offer d as mili­tary training sp cialti should not b giv n any form of niver ity accreditation and should stand in th sam r lation to th niv r ity a extracurricular acti iti s.

our which ar appropriate ni" rsity accr ditation, but

hav not be n tablished as such through th prop r channels hould b off r d for cr dit in the General Ext n ion Division after th y have be n r "i wed and formally rec­omm nd d as appropriate for ni­v r ity credit by th appropriat acad mic departments. Credits for the cour es would be accepted toward th baccalaureate degree.

RE ~l IE D TIO 3 Th ni er it)r hould take st p

to cn ur that fomlal procedure und r which a tudent before anv military ervice xperienc mak' an a r ement with a ROTC pro­gram, shall permit withdrawal with­out p nalt)r (includin imm diate nctiv military ervic ) before the hldent enter th la t two ' ar

of th ROTC program. The ni­":~ it)· ho~d not a urn re pon i­bilit, for l' mforcing hldent-ROTC contract , and pre nt regulation to that eff ct hould b l' cind d.

1 0 , pro\'i ion in Armed er­vic conb'act that re trict th right of tudent to tak cour e of tud \\'hi h ar a 1 Qitimat part of th niver it)·> lib ral ducation hould b tem1inat d.

RE

RE ~I~IE TD TIO 5 Th pace a ignm nt for th

tuff and operation of all R TC program hould b revie\ ed

through th same procedures that apply to all Univer i ; programs.

RECOyIME D TIO T 6 The niversity should negotiate

with the D epartment of Defense for adequate payment to cover all direct and indirect co ts of main­tenance and operation of the ROTC programs on a scale comparable to tho e allowance made by oth r agencies of the ., govemment.

RECO I IE D TIO 7 The niver it)' should cease im­

mediatel the inclusion of uni­formed military per onnel in its ceremonial occasions. There is no reason to include the officer com­mis ioDing ceremony in the gradua­tion exerci es of the University. Provi ion hould b made for the commis ioDing ceremony but not during the ceremony in which the academic degrees of the niversit)' are conferred.

RECO I~IE D TIO The ni ersitv should initiate

di cu ion \vithin'the framework of the Big T n and other appropriate inter-univer it)' bodie to xarnine the po ibilit)r of cooperation in ne otiatin recommended change with th Department of Defen e.

minorit)' report filed with the repOlt of the majority committee was in aareement "ith the anah' i of the pr ent ROTC proQTam wd the condu ion that ROTC hould r main on the ni er ity campu . However, the n1inority report di -agreed \vith the placement of ROTC in the G n ral E~-ten ion Diyi ion.

In t < d, the fiv minoritv mem­ber re omm nded that tlle thr Twin Citi ROT departments ''be re on tituted a programs within th College of Liberal Art on the T\\ in iti Campu ", and ugg t that a . l' truchuin of the chool of Public ffair nuaht proyid th most appropriate local for ROT ."

The r port \Va tW'n d ov l' to tll ni\' r itv

enat Educational P lici Com-mitt e that will con id r tll r com-mendation and r port to the Univer it enate.

23

University Health Sciences could experience major internal reorganization this spring

REGENTS APPROVE A FAR .. REACHING MA YO .. EDUCATIONAL AFFILIATION

Mayo moves to establish an undergraduate medical school - by 1972 - in Rochester

"Together Leith the development of the H ealth Sciences program, at the University of Minnesota the agreement reached todal! ( [arch 13) 1narks the accomplishment of two vital steps recommended 13 months aGo by the Commis ion of University Presidents, reated by the M.ayo Trustees and Univer­sity Regents to advise them regard­ing the establishment of an undergraduate m edical school in Rochester. "We at the University of finnesota look forward with g reat anticipa­tion to the pro111ise and tll challenge of this renewed and en­larged affiliation with the Mayo Foundation. ow we can 1110 e on toward achievement of the vision of that Commission - 'a team of institutions destined to influence medical education not only in Minnesota but in Ollr nation and the world beyond.' '' - M.alcolm Moos, President of the Uni ersity.

A far-r aching stat m nt of medical-educational affiliation be­twe n th Univ rsity and Ma 0

Foundation was approv d b th Univ rsity Board of Reg nts in mid-March.

Th stat ment provi] s a fr ame­work for academic and adminis-trativ ti b tw n th niversity and th propos d Mayo und r­graduat m dical hool that will b stablish d as soon a sufE i nt

24

funding i a ur d. Thi affilia­tion ma also b xtended to fu-tUI' layo educational programs in the allied h alth sci nc s.

~la 0 Foundation' Board of Tru tee had voted approval of id ntical ti during th if F b­mary m ting.

Th 'larch tatcm 'nt reaffirms th relationship that ha ist d be-tw n {ayo and th University in graduat medical cducation over the pas t 55 ears. Its k pOints and proposal in Iud :

(1) Establi hm nt of a Univ r­sitv- 1a 0 Foundation Liaison C~mmitt who m mb rship would con ist of Univ r ity R -gents Mayo Foundation Tru t s and c ntral admini trativ offi­cial of both institutions. The committ would coordinat edu­cational efforts of th two insti­tutions to insur th d v Iopm nt of the best possibl program of h alth edu ation for inn sota.

(2) Long- tanding and produc-ti r lation hip now xi t be-tween the Univ rsity and th Mayo Graduc t hoolof edicin which conducts graduat d gr programs togeth r with r id nc and int rnship training at 1ayo. HO\ v r , "th r i 11 d of t n ion of graduate PI' gram into oth r fi lel besid s those dir tly conc rn d with m eli in ; for 'xampl , aUi d health 'i nc s ..

Existing channels within th two in titutions will b abl to mount

ALUMNI EW

marks anoth r major st p toward th stablishm nt of a Ma 0 und r­gr. duate m di al school that has b n in th discu ion and plan­ning stag's for v ral y rs.

Dr. Raymond D. Pruitt '44MD, dir tor for du ation, Mayo Foundation, said that pr nt plans call for an enrollm nt of 160 und rgraduat m,dical stud nts, with xpansion up to 400 as m an and fa ilitie p rmit. Many of th buildings, quipm nt and p r onn 1 n c s ary to a m dical chool aIr ady exist in the Ia 0

tting. Ithough no opening date has

b n set for the chool, it i antici­pat d that th first class of 40 tud nt could b admitt d as

early a 1972. The chool i a priority it m in

th Iayo D v Iopm nt Program, which ks 50 million over the next S e , ar to upport und r­graduat m di al ducation.

nnu. I op rating . pen e of th hool ar timated at $3.5

million. It i hop d that about $1 milL on of that amount will om fr m th fed ral and tat gov­ernm nt , with the r maind I' to be prodded by pri at ource.

Th d v 1 pm nt of th pro­posed fa) 0 medical chool, ill be s parat < nd eli tin t from th d v lopm nt of any four- or five-) ar coll ge that might b tab-li5h d in Ro h t r a part of th stat ' high r edu ation . -tcrn. Howe r, a. pOint d out in th statem nt, " fa\'o i itall con­e rn d in th provi~ion of colieae-1 'v I training in thc biological, social and ba i ci nc in Ro h ster b aus of th l' lation­ship of th ese fi Id to m di in and the allied h alth

HEALTH SCIENCES Th

"p rt in in, who

niversity in January to study th tru tUI"(' and r-or lanization of the H('alth as a divi ion of the ni,' r it ' , , a

PIlL, 197

pr s nt d to the Board of R g nt in mid-March.

The report makes 16 p ciBc propo als and is exp cted to b the basi of a r organization plan for th HaIth Sci nc s to b accom­plish d by the Regents. In arly May, c ntral administration will pr s nt faculty opinions to th Re­g nts who .. ill pre umably draw up th ir r organization plan then.

Th p cial Committee on truc­tur and Gov mance of the H alth

i n Center, comprised of du-cator from out ide the Uillv r ity, call d for dis olution of the Coll g of f dical ci nce and the estab­Ii hm nt of a chi f administrative officer in charg of Health ci nce . The ollege of Iedical cience mak up four of the seven Health

ci nc units which includ the chools of medicin , nur ing, den­

ti try and public health; the col­I ge of veterinary medicine and pharmacy, and niver ity Ho pi­tal . The nur ing, medicine, pubLc h alth chools and niversity Ho -pitals compose th ollege of :\Iedi­cal cience.

peciBc re ommendations cited in the r POlt includ :

• Hendin a the H ealth cience nt I' by a chi f admiHi trativ of­

B I' di 'solving th exi ling 01-lege of I dical ienc and ap­pointin a dean of the ~Iedical

hool, < nd ubmittina the nt r' budget to the Legi latur a part of th ntire niv l' it\" buda t· . ' • K ping th basi i n de-partm nts an int gral part of the

f dical chool, appointing a co­ordinater, and n oura ina Ql' at r intera tion among ba ic facult r and b tw n ba i and other h alth iences unit ;

• E tabli hing a chool of lli d H alth i nc to h'ain parapro­fe i nal p r onn 1; • Eliminatina admi ion re tric­tion for ni e. rty Ho pi tal pa­tient , de lopina an improwd pro­gram for <1r of merg n y pa­tient , and ext nding ho pital er­vi e in n , way t th communit,· ",hil maintaining an autonomol;s admini tr, tive unit in th HaIth

ent 1';

entralizing affiliation functions with ho pitals, community agencies and ervices in the office of the chief administrative officer;

• 1 ot ha\'ing clinical or research I' id nt and fellows register as graduate tudents of the niver-it)' ·

• Establishing the position of di­rector for continuing education for each h alth cience unit.

Th public' changing exp cta­tions in regard to health care de­livery nece itate a de£lnition by th Re nts of the goals and priori­tie for th Health ciences pro­gram , the committee said.

Th ll-member committee not­ed in th ir report the public' "con­cern and urgency regarding effi­cient, quitable and comprehensive health car for all citizens, and the manife t ne d to provid adequate opportuniti for all qualified citi­z ns who wish to pur u health career .. ,

The :\.1:ernal health dence x­perts included D. Harold Copp prof or and head of th d part­ment of p y holo .' at the nh' r-itv of British Colwnbia; Rashi

F 'in profe or of 111 eli a1 econom­ic at HarY<lJ:d Hiv I' in'; Rob rt J. Cit 1', ,i e pre ident for m meal affaiI at tanford ni\'(,1 in'; I x­ander Hard (chairman ), chancel­lor of \ and rbilt ni\' r ih'; :\fat­th \Y ~fc~ulty ,ic pre id nt of th h alth ci nc at C or town

ni\'er ity: kin L. }.Iorri p cial a _ i tant to the pI' ident at th

niv r in of Kentu k '.

Edmund D. Pell Ql'ino, \'ice pre -id nt for th health ci nee at th

tate ni,'el in' of ew York, ton r Brook H;alth eienc u­

ter; "illiam H. t wart, chancellor of th Loui iana tat Uni,'er in'

f di al ntcr; JCU11 'Van~, hairman of the d partm nt of

In eli ine at Ohio tate Uni\, r in': " '<1rr n \\ (,weI', d an of the hool of Pharma v at t11 ~fedical oI­l g<' f \'irfpnia: and, or<Te D . Zuidema, dir tor f th d part-111 nt of ' urgen- at th J 1m Hop-kin nivcr in;.

As the Alumni News goes to press, four persons charged with breaking into the criminal justice studies' office on March 6 must file pre-plea motions before April 6. A fifth defendent, who claims to be indigent because he lost his job as a University teaching assistant, has been assigned to a public defender and will enter a plea March 26. All five defendents were charged with six separate counts in an indictment returned recently by the Hennepin County Grand Jury - aggravated criminal damage to property, rioting, interference with the use of public property, simple arson and two counts of unlawful assembly.

" A Mindless Act of Vandalism " "The University will take ev ry step n cessary to s e to it that appropri­ate charges are brought against those involv d," University Pr si­dent Malcolm Moos said on March 6 after seeing the damag caus d to the West Bank offic of the D -partm nt of Criminal Justice Stud­ies (CJS) about an hour aft r 15 to 20 "d monsh'ators" ran ack d the office on the first Hoor of the Social S i nccs building.

In what Moos call d an "act of mindless vandalism," files wer torn up and burn d; d sks, chairs and cabin ts wer overturn d and dam­aged; t lephone wires lipped from th wall; books and pap rs thrown on the Hoor; some records carri d away, and windows broken.

The incident ended quickly. Po-li oust d the "demonstrators" within five minut s.

Th University police, who said that they w re "overwhelmcd" and did not hav the manpower to make arrests, mad none imm diately.

The raid occurred spontaneously out of a rally of s veral hundred p rsons who had gathered earli r Friday aft moon in th Coffman Union Main Ballroom to support "B av r 55" - a group who laims

26

re pon ibility for damaging r ords at Twin Cities draft offi es the pr -c ding we k nd.

As individuals sat or mill d about th ballroom, a rock band played, speak rs prai ed th Beaver 55 claim to action, a man burn d \ hat he said was his draft card, and s veral men and WOol n r ad state­m nts that indicat d th Y might b Baver 55 m mb rs.

After several p r ons had come forward to ign a stat ment sup­porting Beav r 55, a man id nti.6 d a an SDS official and a tivi t, stood up and urg d the 1'0\ d to go ov r to th offic s of CJ - an D tar­g t for sev ral months.

It wa stimat d that und r $1,000 physical damag was done to th offi e. Howev r, Dr. David Ward lost an impOltant fifth chap­ter of a book that he and two col­I agues were compl ting, and irr placeable docum nts for re­search proj cts, I ctur not s, and stud nts' acad mi r ord and pa­pers were ith r mi ing or d -stroy d.

On ompl tion of th ir inv tion, th niv r ity turn d th formation over to eorg Henn pin County attorn y.

LUM I EvV

-- ------------~------------------------~---------------------

UNIVERSITY baseball coach Dick Siebert will attempt a third consecutive Big Ten title - and a record - this spring.

Another title would mark the second time Siebert-coached teams have won three consecut ive championships. Beginning in 1958 the Gophers won straight Big Ten titles, culminating in the 1960 national championship.

If Siebert's team can win the Big Ten this spring , he will become the first conference coach to have twice won three consecutive championships.

Minnesota alumni have come to expect the best in Big Ten and college baseball from Siebert who is now in his 23rd season at the University. Minnesota has won seven of its nine Big Ten championships under Siebert and all three of its national titles.

Siebert teams won Big Ten championships in 1956, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1964, 1968 and 1969. The three national titles came in 1956, 1960, 1964.

His coach ing has boosted the Gophers to third in the all-time conference standings for titles won behind Ill inois and Michigan. Siebert's record going into th is season was 498 wins and 239 losses.

His 1969 team won 35 of those games before being beaten in the NCAA playoffs. It was a team which featured the power hitting of Mike Walseth and Noel Jenke. They, along with eight other lettermen, will not be returning and the loss will be noticed, according to Siebert.

" We 'll be a different type of team this season ," he said recently. " We'll rely more on pitching and defense since we lost several fine hitters. "

The pitching staff will be led by captain Dave Cosgrove and Gary Petrich . They had 7-2 and 7-1 records respectively last season with ERA's under 2.00.

Siebert says if younger pitchers like George Hoepner, Roger Zahn and Bruce Ericson come through to complement Cosgrove and Petrich, pitching will not be a concern.

The Gophers are strong up the middle. Catcher Scott Stein, son of University trainer Lloyd, calls a good game and is more than adequate defensively, according to Siebert.

Shortstop AI Kaminski and second baseman Bob Schnietz contribute to the team offensively as well as defensively. The two seniors hit .297 and .346 respectively last season .

Siebert said he'd look at several players at first base, third base, and left and right field before the Big Ten opener with Michigan State April 25 at Bierman Field .

Gary Morgan, a .308 hitter in the local metro college baseball league last year, is a likely starter at fi rst.

Gopher defensive halfback Gary Hohmen is skipping spring football in hopes of becoming a starting third baseman or outfielder. He's likely to become an important part of the team since his

PHIL, 1970

dave shama's GOPHER TALES

high school play attracted major league scouts and he was eventually drafted by the Minnesota Twins.

Siebert says anyone of several outfielders may fill left and right field . Senior and center fielder Jim Nielsen is expected to supply much of the hitting in that he batted .322 last season with nine home runs.

Siebert hopes to have first base, third base and left and right field filled with reliable players as early as possible and says " if we do we' ll have a good team. "

THE COMEBACK KIDS Minnesota's hockey season ended in the NCAA

playoffs last month, short of the team 's goal of a national championship . The Gophers were eliminated 6-5 by Michigan Tech, but the team should know there are few Minnesota fans who weren 't proud of their season.

A point of pride has to be the team 's first WCHA championship since 1953-54. It was the first for Coach Glen Sonmor, the spirited Canadian who was voted the WCHA's Coach of the Year.

Sonmor knows that he 'll never make a swami , but he doesn 't care after this season.

" We trailed in game after game this season only to rally and win," he said. " I told the kids we just COUldn 't continue to do that and expect to win a title, but we played that way all year. "

Down 6-3 late in the finale against Tech, Minnesota saw a rally fall short for one of the few times this season. The Gophers always knew that if they could score late in the game all-American goalie Murray McGlachlan would hold the opposition.

'The finest goalie I've coached and the best in the college game," Sonmor said . " He was the biggest part of our success."

27

IIIIIIUNIVERSITY APPRO ACHIIIIIIIII I I I III IIII IIIII II

To help resolve the current dilemma of physician shortages

YOUR doctor-of-th -near-futurc will not be a sp dalist in child or adult m dicine, nor a g neral prac­titioner (GP).

H will most probably b a famil practition r - a sp ialist train d in famil m dicin : p di­atric, int mal m dicine, famil care and possibly surg ry or ob t t­rics . Unlik mo t GP , he \ ill have studi d in this field through po t­graduat medical training.

Th University of linn ota M dical School b gan a program to train family pra tition r 1 ss than a y ar ago through its n \ Depart-111 nt of Family Practice and om­munity HaIth . Thc d partm nt, head d by Dr. Benjamin Fuller '45MD '50MS, is on of th fir. t of its kind in the nation .

Who will th famil) practitioner b and what will h do? Fuller a)' h will b "th physician of first contact," the doctor to s wh n you don't feel well and who will care for your ntire family.

How docs th family practitioner differ from oth r doctors? lnt rnists and p ediatricians s cm to bc mov­ing toward increasing subsp cial­tion , Full r said. If tb paticnt n ds specializ d aI', th family practition r will r fer him to an­otb r speci alist.

The family doctor's specialty w ill be supervision of the family's total health care.

Th Univ rsity has s v ral r a -on d interests in training physicians in tb family pra ti ar a, Full r said.

Th 1 gislature bas n ourag d uch a program to h lp a th

stat' physi ian sbortag . But, Ful­ler xplain d, tb program was not

28

initiated to paeif) lh' 1 gislnture. Su h a departl1l nt had been on­templat d , t the nivcl'sity ~ince 1959 or 1960, h aid.

The ehool' Educa-tional Polic\' ommitte form d a ubeommittce on family practi e

and eommunit, h aith in 1967 which produce~l re oml11 ndation on the formation of th n w depart­ment. Facult , weI' hir d in 196 and tb m clical r sid nt training program began in J 11 1969, with five traine s. Th fir t undergra ]u­at m dical s 'hool eour es w r offered last ptell1 ber.

DR. BENJAMIN FULLER '45MD '50MS (Internal Medicine), was an internist in private practice in St. Paul until 1966 when he ioined the University's Department of Internal Medicine. Family medicine soon captured his interest and, in 1967 he began devoting his time to the Department of Family Practice and Community Hea lth of which he is now chairman.

Tw Ivc t 15 P l' nt of th na­tion's ph 's i ians ar nO\ in g n ral pr, ('tice, Full r c timat d, "and lh , t' far too f \ ." Fort -n 1 di-cal eh 1 s niors hay ch n to go into at I 'ast on phas of famil y practi 'c training this)' ar - a num­ber tbat 'u JJ er is pIca d with.

The d partm nt has plan to hir ' five n \ [acu]t) 111 I11b rs ach )' ar during its growing tag , but b -can c of its PI' nt mall ize can­not a 'omD1odat th int rn and re id 'nts \Vh \ ould lik to nt r tb , rami] practi program. few m clieal J' sid nei will b \ ork d out, ith clinic and ho pitals out-id th niv rsi in th ncar fn-

ture, Full 'r said. Famil} sp dali ts \ ill b train d

in both hospital and lini to gi e th 'l11 th 'xp ri n of caring for patients wb ar both ick and well , Fuller said. lost po tgraduatc m di al training i don in hO 'pi­tals \Vh 'I' int rn and r id nt onl . th ick t pati nts. Th fam­il pra ,ti d partm nt, how v 1',

wants t a oid training it physi­cialls in this \Va .

DR. JOHN B. O' LEARY '50MD, an internist who practiced medi­cine in Brainerd for nearly 13 years, is concerned with estab lishing a system of medical records for family practice departmental research.

LUM I E\

all. eguen tl), tb departm 'nt has ask 'd th niv rsity's Board of R g 'n t for p nnission to seek out an averag~ population of pa­ti 'nt - both sick and ,ell - for which it r id nt will 'ar. Th pati nt ,auld b of all ag'$ and financial standings in ord 'r to giv train s, witb thcir own pati nt­famili for whom to car, xp ri­cnc in the full rang of a famil practition r' duti s.

The fa mil ph) ician will be b tt'r train'd than th GP. "II won't kno, everything, but h will b able to mak meaningful d isions and us hi tim mar' efEci nt], than the g n ral practi­tion r," Fuller aid.

Th r port of ub ommitt' on family pra tic and community h alth said th family practition r' function ,ill b d P ndcnt upon a high d gr of xp rti e in di a prey ntion and health maint nance, diagno i and manag m nt of com­mon eli a , and c ordinating medi al intcrdi iplinary activit)'.

Th family practi department's curri 'ulum, mu h of whi h i till

DR. JOHN E. VERBY, a ge ne ral pract itioner, practice d in small towns throughout Minn esota b efore joining the Unive rsi ty 's family pract ice unit . He is in charge of a program fo r soph o­more me dical students th rough which they may obse rve practicing physicians during their free time .

PRIL, 1970

in dcV('lopmcntal stage, is to be geared to th se dcp ndcncie .

our e concemcd with human behavior and famih lif , ob r\'a­tion of car and di~gnosis, and ac­tual patient car under upervision bave aIr ad b n incorporated into the ~I dical chool curriculum on an ' lectiv basis for tho inter­'st d in th family p cialty.

inc thep cialty is only a f w \ ars old, there i no wa\' a vet to hip faculn- trained in the ne' '6 Id. Th P di~tricians, interni t and g 'n ral practitioner who now staff th ni"er it: ' family practic d­paltm nt, mu t b train d in many of the ubj ct r c ntly add d in th pecia1t: to th ~Iedical chool curri ulum.

Thi y ar, family practice taff l11emb r ,re taking cour e dealing with family d \' lopment taught by p ycho10 i t and ociologi t , and in probl 111- oh-ing and deci ion­makincr tau ht by a bio tati tician. Both cIa ",ill "b off r d to r i­d nt n xt vear.

The H dgling department alread ha plans to evaluate it own effec-

DR. EDWARD DEFOE, a n a cad e m ic-pedia trici a n- tu rned­fam ily-practice-d epa rtme nt­me mber, is involved wit h the Co mmun ity Universi ty He a lth Ca re Cen ter where fam ily p ra ctice tra inees g a in exp erie nce wi th a populat ion of averag e pat ients.

ti ne throu h re earch. After family physician from the niver­sity go into practice, department m mbers will att mpt to valuate their effecti n in the family practice m dical care delivery pro­c . In eff ct, th research will d termine \Vh th r the depart­ment's teaching ibn 6cial_

And the tudi s will be an at­t mpt by the department to in­cr ase the efEci nc\' of m dical car ,hi! at th am" time helping to deer a th doctor hortage. In an articl ntitl d "n pologia for (Family ) ~ I di ine" in The

ew PllY Icioll rna azine, January 1970 Fuller paraphra d Harvard economi t Ra hi F in aying, "if the efEcienc:' of the ph)" ieian can be increased by three p rcent it , ould have the effect of adding one graduatin clas to th total physi­cian manpow r pool.

''If on ace pt F in' projection, it is a matter of impl arithmetic to recognize tl1at an iner ased effec­ti,' ne of on 1: 15 p reent would b the quival nt of adding 50,000 phl' ieian to the manpower pool," he continu d." ecording to current

tim ate , thi 6gur r pre eDt the current hortacr of ph:' ieian in th nit d tate.-'

Full r aid that r di tribution of the ph:' i ian' ta k i one of the !1Teate t chall ng faced in 111 di­cin today. Th famil~- praetition r, with hi xt nsive knowledcre, ma\' b abl to do mor toward thi end than any oth l' medi al pecialt), by preventi e care - toppin cr the di eo e before it tart, or ill it early tacr .

u h pr ,' nti\' are will inyoh· ,U1 exten i"e 1.'110\\'1 dg of the pa­ti nt and hi 111 dieal hi ton-, and a with the g n ral pra titiOlier, th pro ur m nt of thi knowl dcr will b come ,U1 int crml part of th fam­ily phy ichm' job.

Hi p ronal tou h will be x­h'emely impOltant in pati nt care, Full raid.

In the N It' Phy iciall Full r wrote, "It i our hope that thi new p eia1t:, will h lp to r oh -e the UlT nt dil mma of m dicine of

bein prai ed for it pro e and impLHmed for it inhwl1anit)':'

YOUR SPECIAL INVITATION TO A

SINGULAR HOUSE NEXT MONTH, VISIT THE GOVERNOR'S MANSION

Wa I graduates of th ni ersity as well a former students living in thc Twin Citie m tropolitan area h av a special rea on to join the ~rinnesota

lumnae Club this year. If they accept the special in vita tion of th C lub,

they \ ill be the Club' gues ts a a welcoming tea in the Gov mar's Ian ion on atUl·day, May 9, from 2 to 4 p .m .

The ta te of Minnesota was pres nt d with th 60-year-old ummit venu ston and red brick hom of t. Pa ul lumberman Horace Irving in 1965. In accepting the gift which the legisla ture design a t d th e "State Ceremonial Building" a w 11 as th home of Minnesota' First F amily, the tate be am on of the mo t recent to acquir a r esidence for its governor.

Th English Tudor hOlls ha 20 room , in addition to closets, b athrooms, p antri s, porche and other service, reas. Hi gh window , vaulted ceiling, nine fir p laces and a unken marb le solarium provid an impressive se tting for ent rta ining official gues ts and dignitarie - and in May, Minn ota alumna -.

Th \ leoming t a will give alumnae a n opportunity to se th much-publicized structura l improv m ents, replaeem nt of furnishings nd outsid ' improv m nt th a t wer rec ntly compl ted . And th girl can om pare th >ir int rior d corating ta t s with tho e of the states' First Lady - ~1rs. H arold LeV, nder directed th furnishing of the interior.

Utilizing th sta t colors of blu and gold along

30

with shad s of green, 'Irs. L and ~r has brought Minn sota history and lor jnt h rhome. Representa tive of this arrang m nt is a lar ' ,rea rug in the olarium, d sign d [rom a R d \ ing pott r) pla te, \ hieh eani s th sta te motto, L'Etoile dll ord - th tar of lh orth.

lumn a an \ alk from the n \ I ,-nlarged p atio into the linn sota arden wher

na tiv lr e , plants and wildflow r urr unding a small pool \ h r th

and fi sh wim .

Only lumna lub m mb rs \ ill b admitt d to th e tea. Consequently, a m 'mber hip ard will admit Minnesota alumnae, r the can pay $10.00, if 110n-m mber , a t th door during th da ' of th ent. If an an alumna ' husband i an I m mb r, he will be admitt d for $2.00. H ow cr, advance reservatiolls for the tea ar l1eces ar!].

~r emb rship in th lub mean membership in the l inn ' ota lumni s ocialion ;

]igibility for memb rship in th lumni lub 10 'ated in th e heraton-Ritz Hotel, [or I \ roup rates on both lif insurane and hospital maintenan e insuranc , and to ll S th ' niversit 's two golf COurs S; a subscription to tell i su o[ th lumni

cws, a nd oth r e"citing niv r 'ity-ori nt d me lings spons r d a hear b th Club.

To b ecome a member and mak res rvation [ r the lea, eont:a t the linn sota !Lunna lub, 205

on-man nioll, ni ersit) of linn s ta, linn apolis 55455, l ' lephon 373-2466.

L M I EvV

THEALUMNI TWIN CITIAN AND CALIFORNIAN RECENTL Y NAMED TO REPRESENT MINNESOTA ALUMNI John K. Ha s '.31, a m mb r of th law firm of \V,ldon, Hass & Luc,

anta Barbara, alifornia, \ as re­cently appoint d to th board of elir 'ctor of the ?\ linne ota lumni

ssociation to fill the une\pireel t nn of Dr. John Ides (decca d), rep res nting alumni in R gion III,

outh rn alifornia. Has ' CUlT nt term on til board will xpir in 1972.

dmitted to practice in 1inne­sota in 1939, the native Iowan \Va sp cial a i tant attorn ) n ral for th tatc of ~Iinnc ota until he resigned in th fall of 1946 to ent r privat pra tiee in anta Barbara. Ha!>s ha held and hold everal \ :Iri ' el i\ iI, prof s5ional, t aching and p litical offic in man~' Cali­fornia ar 'a, in addition to his na­tional ommitment.

il1ce bing in al ta Barbara hc has ervcd on num rou campaign committe s for Republican candi­date as w lJ a in ver\" office of th' an ta Barbara Bar 'S50 iation, including th chairman hip of the Di ciplinary Committ . Ha 5 ha

JOH N K. HASS '31

becn admitted to pra<:tic bcfor the .. uprem ourt.

Owen K. Hallbercr '46'\1:\, member of the board :md dir ctor of public r lations for Land

'Lake r ameli ' ,Inc., t. Paul, ha been nam d as the '\linn ota lunmio iation' alumni repr -

sentatiyc' on th n w .\linn ota tudent nion rdinating Board.

MAA 66th Annual Meeti ng-----. & 21st Annual Honors Presentation

JUNE 2, 1970 • SHERATON-RITZ HOTEL RECEPTIO N FO LLOWING IN ALUMNI CLUB

The 66th Annual Meeting of the Boa rd ond Mem bership and the 2 1 st Annual Honors Presentat ion of th e Minnesota Alum ni Associat ion is sc he­du led for June 2, 1970, in the Sheroton-Ritz Hote l, Cotil lio n Ball room, Minneapolis, with a rece ption followi ng in the Alumn i Cl ub.

Outgoing MAA Preside nt James Watson '42BA wi ll presid e over the meeting. Presenting three Outstand ing Achievement Awa rds and two Alumni Service Awards will be Un ive rsity Preside nt Malcolm Moos.

The five new MAA Board appointme nts a nd officers fo r 1970-7 1 wi ll also be announce d ot th e meeting .

PHIL, 1970

OW EN K. HALLBERG '46MSAg

the Hiver it}' ag n y r pall ibl for coordinating the procrram and activitie of ·tud nt muon faciliti on the .\linn ota campu e .

HaUb r i well-known to t ni­ver in' communin' for his vicrorou chain~all hip of' the fund-rai in committee for the t. Paul tudent

enter, are ent we!com d addition to that campus.

CLA / UC ALUMNI TO MEET APRIL 30 FOR ANNUAL M EETING The all ae of Lib ral Art & Uni­ver ity olleg lumni will hold th ir annual me tin on. pril 30, at th lumni lub in the h ra­ton-Ritz Hot L .\linn apoli .:\ 0-

ial hour will op n th event at 6:00 p.m., with dinn rat 7:00 p.m.

Two ut t<mding Achi \" m fit ward and n\'o Di ~tingui 'hed

T a her A ward will b pre ent d durin th \' ning. A numb r of ,tudent 1 ader, a !!u ts f til alumni, will b am ng tho to hear Prof or Toni 1\1 aron, gue t . pcak>r.

31

SCHOOL OF NURSING ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION IS NUMBER ONE 1969 CONSTITUENT GROUP

linn sota School of ur ing 1umna ociation i umber 1. In recognition of their d dicated

upport of th ni ersit, 's School of ursing and in no ativ constit­u nt programmin a , th nursing group' a nam d the Out taneling Constituent sociation of 1969 in 111id-~lar h. They edg d out the

choo1 of D entistr Alumni and In-stitut of T echno10g 1umni o iation in th voting, and will r -

c iv th annual award at th ~1in-11 sota Alumni Association's spring board 111 ting in late pril.

Th ur ing lumnae will b cited th n for programming that in­clud dare ord ight year!, board 111 tings, t 1 phone and annual meeting m mb rship campaigns, a succ ssfu1 and w 11-att nded an­nual m eting, cla s reunion for six graduat classes, and a faculty­alumni s minar as w 11 as a tea at the ational L agu for ursing Convention in D troit for linn­sota alumni and faculty.

Their facult -alumni eminar was wa particularly , ll-r c iv d .

The Centennia l "Port ra it of Minnesota"

32

In celebration of Minnesota 's 100th Anniversary, noted Ameri­can artist Ralph Avery was com­missioned to paint three of the most familiar and best-loved views of the University campus: Burton Hall, Northrop Memorial Auditorium and the Bridge Ap­proach to the West Bank.

Limited first edition reproductions of these commemorative paint­ings, on rich watercolor-type paper, are now available, while they last, at $25 .00 per set, un­framed.

Place your order today with the Minnesota Alumni Association, 205 Coffman Memorial Union, University of Minnesota, Minne­apolis 55455.

Th ur ing lumna Board m m­b r submitt d a ri s of thought­ful qu 's tion r lating to the nm ing program at linn ota prior to the meeting to th ' choo1 of ursing facult ",h were to ,ttencl th joint ' gath ring. The faculty, in turn , spok to th s qu tions durin th m " ong, in a , e11-pi ann cl proc 1m ' that generated informative, produetiv diseu sion .

The ur ing I IInnae s 0 ia-lumni Fund pr j ct eli 1 w II , and th group el ubled it

revenu in 1969. Th alumna al 0

h ld a jOint m ting with th ni-ersit 's ursing tudent oun il

and a tudent-alumni t a in ord l'

to acql1, int coming graduate with th alumnae group.

Th }' have also be n active in

th if upport of I major proj -t , in pcking out and nominating

out t, nding alumna for niv rsit, honor , and in produ cing an xc l­lent new letter [or their m n ber­ship.

ft 'r th ' s min ar, alumnae can tour P , ell HaJJ , now th home of th , niv rsit 's ch 01 of Tursing.

tud nt tour I ad rs will b avail­ablc to show inter t d per 'om through a fa ilit. that was iuitiall) an aU-nur ' s dormitory, th n a resi­denc hall for f malc' . tuc1ent , b -forc it , as renovated for it eur­r nt use.

n ahnnn. who plans to att nd the evening banquet and wi hes to pon or a student at th ' m ting,

is a k d to do o. uch pon orship will co t $5.50.

TWO PROMINENT EDUCATO RS HONORED WITH UNIVERSITY OAA AWARDS

niver­l' imagined,"

LUM I E\i

AT NURSING ALUMNAE DAY . ..

Pioneer Psychiatric Nursing Educator Will Be Cited by Alma Mater

will also sponsor an afternoon emi­nar during th ir lumnae Day that ",ill featur Dori ~1ill r, as ociate dean of th chool of l'lIr ing.

\ pi n r in p~} ·hiatri '-mental health nur ing education, Mi Es­ther . ardon '40B '44~ I \ ill I l' honor d b\ th ' ~Iinnesota chool of ur iri'g lumna ssoci-

,ltion during its nnual Alumna Da) on pril 29.

In 1947, the ational In titut of \1 ntal II alth ( I nI) r cognized an increasing national ,nd local ne d for p ) chiatric nul' and I -gan plannina to PI' vid 1 adership through trainina program . }'H G, rri on w, in' a hington, D. working a a ursin Education

on, ultant with th ,. Publi II aith n 'ic ( PH ) eli i ion of nur ing 'ducati n. r I IH named her training sp cialist in P y-ehiatri -}.Iental IIealth ur ing and chid fits ur ing tion, Trainin and }'Janpow r R Bran h.

From that point on arri-~on's aree1' and the de\' lopm nts of PS) hia tri nur ing b 'came in­timatch r lat d. th onl\ nurse lllemb :r of th nUl l:rain(na till from 19-17 until h te in 19 0, h pro icicd 11l' d d and \ igorou leader 'hip to 1 \'el p th n \ nm­iog Beld and to broad n th I}' III progl', Ill, ans\\'eJing th need for ps~ chiatri nur ing p I' nnel at ('\ en level. In arl\, 19 6 n Ul named Iiss anison hi f of th 11 \\II\'-forme 1 P v hiatri TraiJ;ing Branch. '

!iss ani n' a I' fle ·ted in bOlh th PI' s nt traininO' program and in th tat of the p )'chiatri nm ing prof sion, . u ccs fu lly int rpr ' t d th ' r quir d trninin that \V uld m t patient an n cds. as \ 11 a i Il­sUrt' d that profe sional training standards Wt \'C' III t and the r al potu tial contribution that nur. ing could Illak for t he m ntal health of tlw nation wa fenliz d .

Her work wi th un iv rs iti s an 1 t'oll e~('s lo s me r ognition of and . latus fo r ps: hin tri -\11 ntal

APII L, 1970

h 'aIth nursing 'ducation signifi­canth enhanced th ima e of psy­chiat~ic nursing among f 110\ pro­fe sional , and had an impOltant impact on th student trainee.

niv r ity of alifornia, an Fran-ci co, speaking on "Th ature of

fter 22 year of rvice, h left n ln in 1969 to b om 1 ctur r

and coordinator of Proj ·t for Doc­toral Pr paration for L ur e in th Ps\'chiatri Field at th niv r ity

lIrsing Practice". h will be fol­lowed bv a r action pan 1 com­po ed oE' ruv rsity faculty mem­b r . Registration for the eminar, to be h ld in Pow 11 Hall on the ~Iinneapolis campu , begins at 1:00 p.m. Th s minar "ill tart at 1:30 p.m.

o( alifomia ~J elical nt r, chool of ur ing, an Francisco. H r succ h, also b en ap-

pal' nt in th honor he has achi v d in th ducational world and in th Public Health rvice.

The e\' ning banquet, also ched-1I1 d for the ~ Iinneapolis campus, b gin at 5 :30 p.m. pedal table will b r erv d for th r union elas es of 19-10 1950 1955, 1960 and 1965.

R ervations for the afternoon Thi y ar th ni\'er it I' will pr . nt her with their O~t tanding hi v m nt ward.

eminar, ar 1.00 p r p r on par-abl at the door, and or for the banqu t, '5.50 per p ron. ontact

The chool of ur in~ lllnmae th ill ing lumna ociation.

~- APRIL·MAY OUTST A'TE ANNUAL MEETINGS

BENSON - April 2 w ith Dean Keith McFarland as speaker. Bruce Halvor­son, chapter p resident .

CHISHOLM-HIBBING - Ap: il 16 w ith Glen Sonmor, Hockey coach , as speaker. Dr. Bernard Halper, chapter president.

JACKSON COUNTY - Ap: il 23 , in Lakefield , w ith Prof. Carl Auerbach as speake r. CUltis Pietz, chapter president.

LUVERNE - Ap: il 27 w ith 0 1'. Wallace G. Kubicek as speaker. Dr. Gordon Hamann, chapter president.

MANKATO - Ap ri l 23 with Prof. John R. Borchert as speaker. Dr. Dan Han­son , chapter p resident.

PIPESTONE - Ap ril 14 w ith Dr. James App as speaker. Dr. W . K. Arget­singer, chapter president.

REDWOOD FALLS - May 5 with Dr. Lyle French as speaker. Dr. Robert Kleinart , chapter p ~esident

VIRGINIA - May 8 with Dr. Kallis Kaufmanis as speake r. Clarence Ivonan , chapter p resident.

WADENA - April 9 with Dr. John P. Brantner as speaker. Mrs. Mary Hor­sage r, chapter president .

WASECA - April 29 with Dr. Ivan Frantz as speaker. Dr. W . H. Rethwill , J r., chapter president.

WHEATON - Ap ' iI 27 with Martin Snoke & Panel as speakers. Dr, Ha rold Weickert, chapter p resident.

WILLMAR - Ap: il 14 with Prof. Robert T. Holt as speake r. Henry Schm idt, chapter president .

WINDOM - Ap ril 21 with V.P. Stan Wenbelg as speaker. James Remund , sec letary-treasurer of chapter.

33

AROUND &ABOUT

Social Work --------

'59 Jam s (Terry) orazin '59MSW

'66MPA, Minneapolis, has been ap­pointed dir ctor of th ommunity pro­grams e tion of the Minne ota tate o partment of Public W ellar 's I di­cal rvices division. An a istant ec­tion cUr ctor in the division sin e 1967, he was previou ly supervi or, divi ion of dom tic relations, II nn pin County d partment of court rvic s for four years; a counselor at the IIenn pin County IIome School for Boy , Glen Lak ; and a probation officer in the adult division , Hennepin County d part­ment of court s rvices .

CLA-------------------'36

Donald Leaf '36BS, ~!innetonka, I in­n sota, ha~ be n appointed dir clor of acquisitions for lIcritag ursing enters, Inc., Minneapolis. For the past ight) ars he has be n , dministrator of lIerit. ge of Edina nursing hom

'49 Dr. Clwrles E. Treanor '49B , Wil­

li amsville, ew York, has b en appOinted head of the aerodynamic res arch d part­m nt of Corn 11 e ronautical Laboratory, Inc. ( AL ). n has be n acting head of th d partment for th pa~t year, having join d CAL in 1951. Treanor w, ~ ap­pointed visiting professor of phys ics at

tanford University in 1966, and was named as i tant head of AL's aerody­namic research department on hi s return from Stand Ford.

'52 Donald J. Clarkin '52B 'COt, , per-

vi II , minois, has be n nam d s nior vi e pr sid nt of Valley F rg Lifc lnsnrance Company, a m mber of th / insur­,n g roup . ITe presently s rves as head of administration, with r sponsibi lity for accounting, service, premium and loss proce sing. Clarkin joined A/in ~ llran e in 1961.

34

'57 Edwin . ClIlbert, Jr. '57BA, Duluth ,

linnesota, was r cent I) awarded the hartered Lif nd r\\ riter de,ignation at

onferment E"\er ises of th e merican ollege of Life ndenvriter in

\ a,hington, D . . I I ' ha., b en in th in­surance business for nine years.

'60 George II . ZlIblllak '60B , East Bruns­

wick, N w Jersey, rebional pension con­sultant for the Equitabl Life s~urance

o iet) of Lhc nited tates in th > 1 ew York office, was recentl ) s lected to ap­pear in the 1969 edition of Olllmllnity L aders of America. Ilis recognition re-ults from his com munity involvement

during four years a~ a re~ id ent of It. Lebanon, Penns}lvania. During this tim e, Zubltlake was a III mber and officer of r-.rinnesot.' Pittsl urgh alumni 'lub the

It. Lebanon Jaycc ' chapter, Theta' hi

Minnesota Kev Ring

Something you' ll like. Regents' Medallion. Perfect for a bir thday, anniversary.

or lust a gesture of thoughtfuln ess. Members $.85; others $ 1.00. (Add 3°" State Excise Tax TO TOTAL. Minnesota residen ts only.)

r----------------Minnesota Alumni Association : 205 Coffman Union I Uni versi ty cf Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455 :

Please send me key ring(s) . I Here is my check or mon ey o~der for I $ to cover my order . I

I Name (in full ) .. I Street Address ..... I

I City Zone State I o I am a me mb er. I ~-----------------

KUHARSKI

ahUllni fraLernity association, It . L banon nited Pres h) t ri an Church and the },It,

Lebanon i\ ic L ague. He w, sel ctt'd as " K) Ian" of the Jayce chapt r for three ·om. cutive ' ars, and two )'erus ,go his e£l ofts led to his inclusion in the 1961,

IItstancling Young Men of America, a national publication. Irs. Zubulake (Ph vl­Ji ~ t-l. ay) is a 1962 graduate of lht

ol1 egt' of Libt'ral rL,.

'61 jallles P. Kllhar~ki '61B • taten Island,

I e\\ York, has h en 1'1 cted a \ ice pf('i­dent of Ining Trmt ompany of ." York. Kuhar~ ki . \\ ho joined [n'ing llJ 1961, is a loaning officer of the bank\ i'\ational Dh i ~ i on .

'67 Two I innesota ulumni rl'cent\Y n>-

ei\ d ad\ ·anct'd degrees from Pt·it{c ·loll niH?rsity. Brendan B. Godfrey '(l7D , linnt'apolis, wus awarded a ma,ter of arts

in phy, ics, and Morgan Thol/l a~ '67B , linnl'apolis, a lll. ' ter's In pllbJi· aITairs.

'68 Gary R. Browning ·6 B , naconda,

lont'lt1<, \ a~ promoted to nn)' ~[ ecial­ist fom recentl) , while ;en ing with tIll' First Infantr), Oi\ ision in Vietnam. I Ie is a c!t>rk-t 'pist with the di\ision 's 6r~t ad­ministration cOlllpany. Browning. who entered lh rill) in pril 1 69, wa' sent 0\ er, as in September.

PF Blllce L. Thoroia '6 B, Iinl1l'­apo lis, is an operations ,nd intclligenCl> ~pl' 'ialiH with th rlll) h adquarters and s ' rlli ·e battet-, econd Battalion, 77th

rUller), of the 25th Infanlry Dh ision near \l hi , ietnam. lie ent red the Arml

in April 1 6. and \I as station d at Fort Sil l, kla!tol1la, bdore going ver,e(lS in S 'ptl'll1lwr.

Jalll es 11 . Gamble '6 BA, linn apoli>, wa~ promoted Tt' entl) to f111 spl' ialist Mve while H%igncd l lh 20th Enginl'l't Brigacl ' n ',)f T tl) inh , ietnat11. tlJnblL i ~ an information specill li't in headquarters eOl1lpUtl of the briga Ip's 588th Engin ('I

Battalion .

L M I EW

Agriculture ________ _

'31

Robert If. Jewett '31 E repr ent d the University of Minnesota at the fall inauguration of Dr. David L. McKenna as fifth president of eattle Pacific Col­lege, eattle, \Vashington.

'50 teee "';\e 'SOB For Fall reek Wis­

consin, becaml' a bank cashier i~ Fall ree'k rectnth aft,'r more thall 19 \ears

\\ ith the Ol{\\ ed 011Joration, t. Paul. \\ hil' at on\\ ed, \vise, as a projed di­rc tor, dl'\eloped a pro ess for making Illineral fiber lile from the molt n ro k w.Lste of hla'>t furnaces. II re~igned to go to work at the tate Bank of Fall reck, bl'comin~ the third gl'neration of his fami­I) to b in the hank. His grandfath r was onl' of th ()r~anizers of the bank 111 190:3 and, ned as its first cashier. '''is 's fa­thl'r is t'urr 'ntl) prl'sjd 'nt of tht, hal k.

'58 Stuart V. Imlll('r '5 B g, \ erland

Park, K, nsas, became r gional 111 'rchan­d"ing speci.llbt in agricultural chemicals for t, ndard il at the Kansas it\ re­gion, I office in October, 1969. PredtlllSh he had been mp ' rdsor of the agricultllnil chemical plant in Ib rt L , l innesotl1, and is a past president of tIlt' linne­sota IUl11ni ssociation club there.

Law School _______ _

'30 Carl M. ader 011 '27B ':30JD, Ull\­

mit, New Jerse\', ha re tired a~ secret un f J r k & o;npun\ , Inc. At the time 1;[

his announ cd retire;lwnt, he' S 1'\ d a~ a member of the phanna euti al and cl1l'mi­cal firm's hoard of director" and lLS pre,i­del t 01 The lerck om pan) l' oundation.

nderson join d Mer k in 19:3-1 a~ direc­tor of th Legal Depar tment lInd M'T\ >d a\ l" culh e assi~ t nnl to tl1<." pr sident, di­TectOI' of foreign 11 th ities, b 'fOil' his electi ()n as sl'crl'tnr} in 1956. Last )e1\l' h '

PHlL, 1970

IMMER

W'l~ leet d to th board and "'ill continue as a director until his teml 'pire . .\n­der.,on jOined :-'lerck after coming; from the I ew York law liml of Root Clark Buckner & Baliantine. In 1966 he ;ccei\ed an honomT) Doctor of Law degree from \\'ag;ner ollege, taten bland, New York, and. in 196 , the Out-tandin Achieye­ment A\\ard of the ni\{'r,it) of :-'Iinne­sota.

Medica 1' ________ _

'44 RIc/lOrd M . • U agraw '39B '4~lD h

been appOin ted a oci te dean and di­redor of program planning and de­\cl pment in til College of fedicine a t the ni\ersity of lllinoi ' Medical

en ter campus, Chicago. ll e com to I~in i following a year a deputy a-51 tant ecretary for Healili :-'Ianpow r in tile LT .. Department of Health Edu-ation and Welfare. Dr. :-'l agra\~' wa

<1 member of tile :-'linnesota medical fa ulty in tll department of P ychiatn ;lntl I eurology and Internal :-"ledici.ne from 19 0 until he took a leave of

MINNESOTA GLASSES Set of 8

A beautiful set of 8 glasses with baked­on U of M design, chip-proof rims weighted bottoms. 12%-oz. size. Pack­ed in safety cartons. Price includes postage and handling. To members: in­state $3.50; outstate $3.75. Others : in­state $4.00; outstate $4.75.

ANDERSON NELSON

ab cnce in 1967. He was named as istant dean of the ~ledical chool in 1959 and directed ~Iinne ota's Comprehensive Clinic pro!ITam from 1960-6- .

Journalism _________ _

'58 Thoma~ C. Xci 011 '5 BAJoum, R)e,

i'\e\\' York, ha b en appointed gen ral manager (i'\e", York ) for Padilla, arjeant,

uJlinm and peer. Inc.. :'>Iinneapoli­ba.ed public relation fiml. howing; a background in newspaper, agency and military public affairs, ~ elso~ is 'al 0 a published author aod photographer. He has been en'ing a~ eniOT publici t for :'>Iinne ota :-' lining and ;\\anufacturin<T public relation oin e in ~e\\ York. '"

Nursing _________ _

'69 Deborah C. R;c~c '69B 0.'ur . 'Yad na.

~Iinne. ot,l. \\ ," recentl) promoted to fir t h~llten.'lnt in tile Aml) '\ uThe Corp. Lt. RIel' I a nUT'e at tIlt' Irwin Am" Hos-pital, Ft. Hile), Kanqs. .

Minnesota Alumni Association 205 Coffman Union University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minn. 55455

Please send set(s) of Min­

nesota Glasses (8 glasses per set). Enclosed is my check for _ ___ _

I am a member

Serial No. __________ _

Name ___________ _

Address __________ _

City ___________ _

State _______ Zip __ _

(Note: Minnesota residents add 3% sales tax)

-----------------~

Dentistry _________ _

'49 Dr. Dorrance Anderson '49DDS, anta

Barbara, California, I' cently returned from iena Leon wh r he gave dental care to th natives who had formely re­ceived none. "Several y ars ago, my wife and I and our two sons d termined to give a few months a y ,r and om of our worldly poss s ions to unfortunate peo­ples of the world - by giving assistance in dentistry," Dr. nderson said. In the last 10 ye r he and his family have et up dental clinics in 10 countries and on the ship Hope. Each m mber of his family has serv d as a d ntal as istant. "We plan to kcep making thes lrips as long as we are so bl e sed and an a omplish them," he d clared.

'65 Dr. Arnold J. Hill '61BA '63DD

'65M , Boch st 1', Minn sota , was recent­ly appointed consultant in d ntish'y for childr n to th Mayo Lini. Dr. Hill pI' c­ticed dentistry from 1963 to 1970 in Min­neap lis and Rochest r.

Graduate---------

'35 Dr. George Gordh '35M , has won a

grant for r s arch on t. Anselm from Hol­lins Coli ge, Virginia, and th Ford Foun­dation. Dr. Gordh is a profes or of relig i n at Hollins.

Eunice Verna Flock '35PhD, consul­tan t in bio hemistry in the Mayo Clinic sine 1936 and professor of biochemistry in tb Mayo raduate chool of Medi­cine, niv r ity of Minn sota, Rochest 1',

retired from thes po ts 0 tober 1. She came to Ro h ster in 1930 as an as­si tan t or technician in biochemislry with Dr. J sse E. Bollman in the former Mayo Foundation Institute of Exp rim nta l Medicin . In 1933 she b cam a fellow in physi I gical chemis­try in th Mayo Graduate School of Medic in , and I' ceiv d her PhD in that fi eld b for appointrn nt to lh Mayo

36

BROOME

taff as a consultant. Dr. Flo k i the au thor of more than 130 paper in the medical and sci ntinc lit ratur in h r 6 Id of r earch.

Dr. Richard D. Mullincaux '35PhD, EI elTito, alifornia, has b en named g 'n­

eral mana er of research and d vetopment for h U D \ lopm nt ompany's marktt­ing, tramporlation and sllppli s, and manufa turing organization~ . Dr. lulli­neatLX joined heIl as a chemist in 1951 and \Va.~ appointed r s arch sup rvisor in 1960. Thre years latcr he transferr d to the hell Oil ompany, lh n relurned to the re earch center in 196 , lo b C0111C dire tor of g n ral sci nc .

'36 tephcll Stephan. '36PhD, Fa) ltcvill ,

Arkansas, I' c ntly r igned a~ chairman of the departm nl of ,ociolog) at l11 ni­er it)' of Arkamas to return lo full-lime

teaching and r search.

'38 Four Minn sola graduatcs ha\ e recenl­

Iy be n lected to 1970 chairmanships of merican h mica.! ociely ( ) divi-

sions. Dr. Frederick K. Broome '38 I is chai rman of the S di ision of hemi, I Hteratur '. From 19.3 to 1942 h ' \\ as with th . . D 'parlmenl of gri 'ltllur ; thc

is the answer a different school?

Knowing the dirrerences in schoo ls and in children has been our special concern ror more than 25 years. Ask us to send you our free booklet " To Find A School To Fit the Child ". Write

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Telephone (203) 269·3333 Wallingford , Connecticut 06492

SHREEVE COUNSEll

nexl ye, I' h' joined rmour & ompan) .1.~ a re arch chem i,l. II lat r b C,\nl man­ager of product development and tlwn joincd the techni al infornlalion depart­nwnt. In 1960 Broom was nam d re­s arch liaison al bboll Laboratori s, , nd is CUrT lltl)' manager of bbott's re, 'arch information d partment.

Dr. Frederick G. Bordwell '37B, '41PhD h m i~ chairman of the dl­\ision of organic hemi;tr). Author of over 100 rese reh publications and ,\ t \t­hook, h T\ ed on th ditorial board of lhe JOllmal of OrganiC II lIli Iry. Dr Bord" 11 conduct d studie , under a a­tional cience Foundation F 1I0wship, at th orl onne in Paris and th ni\ ersit) of alifornia at L, ng,1 s. 11 is a pru­fessor of ch 'mislr ,t orth\\' stcrn 111-

\ ersi l}'.

Dr. Jea ll ' l1 M . . !treccc '56~ 1 is chair­man of the ' divi;.ion of llourine 111'01-

islry. he is proh'ssor and, ling Iwad of the lepartl11enl of hemhlr) at the nl­\ el'sity of Idaho.

Dr. RaYlllond E. oll/l~ell '571'hO is chairnlan of the di\ i ion of medicinal

h mislry. prof 'ssor of medi inal chem­i,try in the 011 g' of Pharmac and de­parll11 nt f int l' mal medicin al the

nh ' rsit)' of fiehigan, Dr. oun~ell is a member of lh ' medicinal ch mblr) study s diem for the 'alional Im tilut s of I [('a llh and is hairman of lhe medi inal chl'mbtr), ,eel ion of lh adem) of Pha rmac uti al ins. IT jOincd the sla ff of the nh rsity of iichigan as an asso i. le professor of pharmaceutical ehl'l11i>tr ; h was I r viously enior r -se. r h chem isl \\ ith . D. arle and

0111 pan) , hicago.

'48 01'. Wi7Iiam lel/ond '4.6 'IA.

'4 PhD, AI ,andria, irgillin, has been nam 'd prcsid -nt-el cl of th ' District of

olll ll1!>ia Ps . holol-(ical sso if\tion . He IS

al,o (",I' lith \ iec-pre,idenl of the Hum an R SOliI' 'S research rganization. In 1967 and 196 Dr. ic I lland s rved a~ pre,id('nl of Ih ' di vision of mililar\' ps cholog of Ih an Ps rc hological

ssoc ialion.

L M I E\

'49 Dr. Donala R. Grubb '49MA, head

of the journalism department at orthem I]]jnoi~ niversity, DeKalb, Illinois, wa recently chosen pre ident-el ct of th American ociety of Journalism School

dministrators. Oth r Minnesota alumni rving with Jilin on the journalism de­

partment' faculty include Quintus C. Wilson '53PhD, professor; Donald F. Brod '6 PhD, a si tant professor, and

braham Z. BMS '69PhD, a istant pro­fessor.

10 eph V. Reger '47B '49~ 1 ,Overland Park, Kansas, has b en named president of th Paniplus Company, producer and di bibutor of additives for baking and food industrif'. , In 1950 It ger joined F(lremo t- 1cK on in an Francisco and , ork d in re ' arch, t hnical rvice, technical sa1e, sales management and mark ting. II I ft the position of market-

jng director of the industrial divbion and joined Paniplus as "ice-pre ident and di­rector of marketing.

'52 Dr. Glenn H. Hamor '52PhD, Los An­

geles, CaUfomia, \Va re ently named head of the Diversity of outhern California (U C) chapter of The igma Xi, a national honor ociet} for the encouragement of scientific re earch. Dr. Hamor is profe or of pharmaceutical chemistry at C where he is doing re earch with arti£cial food sweetner .

'53 Dr. Harry D, Crawford '44B '47 fA

'53PhD, Cochran, Georgia, joined the fac­ulty of liddle Georgia College as as oci­ate profe sor of phy ics and engineering r entl),. He has tauaht electrical engi-

Universitvof Minnesota

Alumni Fund The Alumn i Fund is a ma jor sou rce of funding for the special p ro jects and needs wi th in each College and School and for unrestricted g ifts to be used wh e re the nee d is g reates t. Your gift or bequest to the Alumn i Fund will p rovide a vitally neede d suppo rt fo r the Un ive rs ity in its ca n· tinu ing effort to achieve exce llence in educat io n. Send today for furth er information about maki ng a g ift o r a bequest to th e Alumn i Fund .

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ALUMNI FUND 205 Coffman Memorial Union , University of Minnesota Minneapolis , Minnesota 55455

Please send d e tail ed information on how to make a gift o r be quest to th e University of Minne sota ALUMNI FUND . Nom el ________________________________________________________ __ AddresL' ______________________________________________________ __

City _ ___________________________ Stot ... e _____________ Zip _____ _

ctass and College

APIUL, 1 70

REGER

neering at Oklahoma tate niver ity and worked as a phy ici t at the t. Barnabas Hospital Research Foundation, the Gen­eral Electric Company Electroni Labor­atory and the eterans Admini tration Ho pital, Minneapolis.

'55 Dr. Gene JI. 10rdby '49M 'S5PhD,

Norman, Oklahoma, was named ,ice pre -ident for administration and finance at the

oiversity of Oklahoma. D r. ordby has been dean of the College of En ineeTing there since 1962 and has erved as head of the department of civil engineerin at the niversity of Arizona, director of the

izona Transportation and Traffic Insti­tute, program director for engineering ciences with tlle 1 ational cienee FOUD­

dation in Washington, D .C. and consult­ant to the . . Office of Education.

'56 Patricia M . D 11k r '56 J , ~ IUDcie, In­

diana, b b 0 promoted from in tructor of elementary edu alion at Ball tate ni­versity, Muncie, to as istant prof or. he has been a member of the Burri chool elementary education faculty ioee 1964 and ha taught in public chools tllTough­out " 'iscon in.

'58 10 ph B . POllle, Jr, '5 :\1 • We" ton,

onn cticut, h' ' been named re earch u­penior of the creal r arch laboratory group, ITT ontinental Bakina Company, In " Itve, New York, \vher he will ha,'e re pon'ibility for cereal r search projects. II '''\5 fonnerl), enior r arch chemist for ontinental.

'62 Itlyton

" ' bcon in, r eived a !!mnt of 600 for re e<lTch and reativit project from the Lutheran hurch in neTica and the

arLha e liege board of truste . Di -kerud is director of pe ia! chools at

artllage. 11e \\'a a re ar h as ' j, tant at th U nh ersit} and a 0 ial tudie teacher in the nob·Henn pin hool Di.;trict befor joining th facul!,) at artllage in 1962.

37

WHEElER TILLITI

Inst itute of Technology, ___ _

'06 Two niver ity alwnni have joined to­

gether to change the name of a 57-year-old consulting ngineering firm from Walter H. \~h ,[er Inc. to Wheeler & Tillitt Inc. Walter H. Wheeler '06BCE, internation­ally known in the field of tructural en­gin ring was a partner in a consulting engin ering firm in Denver before moving to Minn apolis to found the present com­pany. He is the inventor of the "smooth ceilings sy tern" of Hat slab concrete con­struction. His best known local work is the M ndota Bridge. A 1952 recipient of the University's Outstanding Achieve­ment Award, Wheeler helped establish the building code standards for the con­crete industry which ar in use today.

James C. Til/itt '59MSCE, joined ~ ler, Inc. in 1960 and is now the cor­poration's president. He is noted for de­sign of grain el vators, buildings, railroad and h ighway bridges. Tillitt was struc­tural engineer with Schu tt-Meir Com­pany before joining Whe ler, Inc.

'32 William Crawford Hill '32BCE, Sal m,

Oregon, was appointed executive secretary of the Oregon State Board of Engineering Examin rs . Hill retired from the Oregon State highway departm nt as foundation engin r for the bridge divi ion and served as 1969-70 president of the Willamett branch of th Am rican Soci ty of Civil Engin rs , and as a memb r of the Polk County Tax Equalization Board and th Orchard II ights Water Association. H is associated with Shannon and Wilson, Inc., Portland, West Coast consultants in foun­dation ngin ering and soil m hanies.

Russ II F. Erickson '32BME, Scarsdale, New York, was r cently el ted chairman and chi f xccutive offic r of International Telephon and Telcgraph's Rayoni r In­corporated. Erickson has be n with ITf Rayonier since 1946 and has been th ompany's president and hid executive

officer sin e 1958.

38

LANDSBERG

'36 M. 1. Landsberg '36BCE, Minneapolis,

was recentl promot d to vice-president and g neral manager of the R co division of Interplastic Corporation, producer of synthetic resins and fioi h d molded prod­ucts. H h< d b en the division' general manag r.

Veterinary Med, ______ _

'33 Dr. Beniamin S. Pomeroy '33DVM, St.

Paul, ~ as r cently nam d Minn sota' "Veterinarian of the Year" by the finn­sota V t rinary M dical Association. Dr. Pomeroy, who is head of the departm nt of Veterinary Microbiology and Public Health at tl1 University, has written over 70 scientific papers on poultry diseases and di as control. H has be n on the

niversity staff ince 1933.

'68 Bonnie V. Gustafson '66BS '68DVM,

the only woman instructor in Texas A& 1 .Univ r .ity's College of Veterinary Medlcwe, will work in re earch and teaching comparative and clinical anatomy. A native of Minneapolis, she comes to Texas A&M from Minnesota wher sh was an instructor in the de­partInent of V terinary Medical Surgery and Radiology. Dr. Gustafson is a mem­ber of th American Veterinary M dical A ociation, Women's V terinary M di-al Association, Equine Practitioner's

Association, and th Palomino Horse Breeders of America, which sh s rYes as national dir ctor and inspector.

Education ________ _

'54 Lieutenant Colonel Alice C. Taylor

'54MAEd, a nurse at Walt r Reed Gen­ral Hospital, Walt r R d Army Medi-

cal nt r, r ntly r tir d from the Army Nur e Corp . h was

awarded til Army ommendation Medal for her m ri torious scrvic as duca­lional coordinator in the Department

ERI CKSO N

of ursing from 1967-69. Miss Taylor ent r d the ervic in 1943 and has inc that time erved at various m w­

cal posts throughout the oited tates, th outh Pacific, Korea and Europe.

'59 Paul]. deWahl '50B , '59 [ 0011

Rapids, Minnesota, has retired from the fi Id of ducation due to perman nt d,~­ability from lateral cl ro is. D Wahl spent 18 y ars in ducation teaching in Minn sota, Arizona, Washington, w.tria and Germany. For the past oin years h was an elementary choo! prin ipal in 1inne ota.

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change after age 60 . Write for details .l

• You Are Eligible . . . if you are a member of the MAA, age 60 or under, and are either actively employed or are an unem­ployed housewife. (Coverage for residents of Texas, Ohio, New Jersey, and Wisconsin is not available at this time.)

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YOUR FEllOW ALUMNI NOW WITH CML '66 Minneapolis Donald P. Kaelble '52 Minneapolis '66 Chicago Dono ld A. Kirschner, CLU '58 Home Office '44 Asheville Jerry C. Lathrop '66 Minneapolis '41 Minneapo lis J . Denis McCarthy, M.D. '59 Home Office '67 Mi nneapo lis Michae l T. Meland '64 Minneapo lis '61 South St. Pau l David L. Nola nd '5B St. Paul '47 Minneapolis Pe ter F. Stoudohar '57 Dul uth

'SO Du luth Cha rlton Le Ray Sto ne '36 Mi nn ea po lis '67 St. Paul Rober t J . Tschida '63 St. Pau l